Story highlightsA fire had broken out onboard the Indian Naval Ship Brahmaputra, a multi-role frigate, on the evening of 21 July, 2024 while she was undergoing refit.The body of the Indian Navy sailor, who was missing since India’s warship INS Brahmaputra caught fire at the Mumbai naval dockyard earlier this week, has been found.”The body of Sitendra Singh, Leading Seaman, has been found today after intensive diving operations,” Navy spokesperson Commander Vivek Madhwal said.Navy Chief Admiral Dinesh K Tripathi and all personnel of the Indian Navy extend their deepest condolences to the family of Singh, he added.”The CNS (Chief of Navy Staff) was briefed on the mitigating actions taken to limit the extent of the damage, plan to recover and undertake repairs to restore the ship’s functionality at the earliest. The CNS directed that all actions by the Command and Naval Headquarters to make INS Brahmaputra seaworthy and combat-ready are to be initiated immediately,” the Navy said in a statement.”The Indian Navy stands resolutely with the bereaved family in this hour of grief,” it added.The Navy said in a statement on Monday (July 22) that the ship was resting on its side after a major fire on the ship on July 21. The fire was brought under control with the assistance of firefighters from Mumbai’s naval dockyard but it suffered “listing” to its port side.Also watch | India: INS Brahmaputra damaged as fire breaks out aboard shipThe Indian Navy said in a statement that the ship could not be brought to the upright position despite efforts.”A fire had broken out onboard the Indian Naval Ship Brahmaputra, a multi-role frigate, on the evening of 21 July, 24 while she was undergoing refit. The fire was brought under control by the ship’s crew with the assistance of firefighters from the Naval Dockyard, Mumbai and other ships in the harbour, by the morning of 22 Jul 24. Further, follow-on actions including sanitisation checks for assessment of residual risk of fire were carried out,” the Navy had said.The INS Brahmaputra is the first indigenously built ‘Brahmaputra’ class guided missile frigate. It was commissioned into the Indian Navy in April 2000.(With inputs from agencies)Mukul SharmaMukul Sharma is a New Delhi-based multimedia journalist covering geopolitical developments in and beyond the Indian subcontinent. Deeply interested in the affairs reviewMore
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