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Thursday, November 28, 2024

Australia and Indonesia Unite to Patrol Fisheries

Maritime Activity Reports, Inc.

April 8, 2016

  • HMAS Wollongong send their boarding party team to investigate a vessel for possible breaches of Australian laws. (Photo: Commonwealth of Australia)
  • Official dignitaries and Commanding Officers of Australian and Indonesian ships at the closing ceremony for AUSINDO CORPAT 2016. (Photo: Commonwealth of Australia)
  • (Photo: Commonwealth of Australia)
  • (Photo: Commonwealth of Australia)
  • (Photo: Commonwealth of Australia)
  • HMAS Wollongong send their boarding party team to investigate a vessel for possible breaches of Australian laws. (Photo: Commonwealth of Australia) HMAS Wollongong send their boarding party team to investigate a vessel for possible breaches of Australian laws. (Photo: Commonwealth of Australia)
  • Official dignitaries and Commanding Officers of Australian and Indonesian ships at the closing ceremony for AUSINDO CORPAT 2016. (Photo: Commonwealth of Australia) Official dignitaries and Commanding Officers of Australian and Indonesian ships at the closing ceremony for AUSINDO CORPAT 2016. (Photo: Commonwealth of Australia)
  • (Photo: Commonwealth of Australia) (Photo: Commonwealth of Australia)
  • (Photo: Commonwealth of Australia) (Photo: Commonwealth of Australia)
  • (Photo: Commonwealth of Australia) (Photo: Commonwealth of Australia)

Illegal fishing was the focus of a joint operation between Australia and Indonesia that concluded in Bali on April 5.

 
The fifth coordinated maritime security patrol, AUSINDO CORPAT 2016, had elements of the Australian Defense Force unite with the Indonesian Armed Forces in the waters between Australia and Indonesia over the past 10 days to target the exploitation of natural resources, specifically illegal fishing.
 
Commencing in Darwin, the operation included aircraft, ships and headquarters staff from both nations in two synchronized task groups. The ADF contributed HMAS Wollongong and an AP-3C Orion aircraft, while the Indonesian Armed Forces provided naval vessels KRI Sampari and Layang along with maritime patrol aircraft.
 
The combined operation was conducted to improve coordinated maritime security between the ADF and Indonesian Armed Forces along the Australian and Indonesian shared maritime boundaries from North of the Tiwi Islands to targeted areas near Indonesia.
 
The Deputy Commander (ADF) of Joint Task Force 639, Commodore Brenton Smyth, RAN, said the coordinated patrols gave personnel from both nations the ability to share information and enhance each country’s ability to detect illegal fishermen.
 
“Australia and Indonesia are near neighbors, and the valuable skills we can hone allow our personnel at sea and in the air to work together to address illegal activity along our exclusive economic zone boundaries,” Commodore Smyth said.
 
“Our nations share many common security interests, including a shared maritime border, and we are committed to the security of our regional environment and to the deterrence of exploitation of natural resources in our maritime zones.
 
“Each country worked within its own maritime boundaries, but the coordinated nature of these patrols allows us to detect, apprehend and deter those people who take advantage of the close boundaries to avoid apprehension.”
 
“As the recent Defense White Paper notes, Indonesia is increasing its focus on maritime affairs and we will seek greater cooperation on maritime security activities that contribute to a stable and prosperous region in the future.”
 
The Commander of the Indonesian Navy’s Sea Combat Training Group Eastern Fleet, Commodore I.N.G Ariawan, said the patrol incorporated a number of joint evolutions designed to enhance information sharing and interoperability between the forces of the two nations.
 
“Our Defense Forces have once again made great progress in improving our maritime security procedures through developing our communications and information sharing techniques,” Commodore Ariawan said.
 
“Each time we conduct this patrol our joint skills become more and more aligned. This increased alignment is noticeable at the tactical level at sea and in the air, as well as at a strategic level.”
 
The Australian assets that participated in this activity are currently assigned to Joint Task Force 639, the ADF’s contribution to border protection operations.

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