SPECIAL HONG KONG EDITION
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Navy News
PLAIN ENGLISH CAMPAIGN AWARD WINNER 1996
Navy rocks the cradle (not the boat) for its new mums
Royals at the ready over Zaire
14-15
White ships going grey as warfare role becomes priority
WARPAINT FOR SURVEY FORC
ROYAL MARINES were still on standby to help the humanitarian effort in Zaire as Navy News went to press. Troops from 45 Commando and the 1st Battalion The Parachute Regiment were on 72 hours' notice to fly out to Central Africa to help protect refugees returning to their homes in Rwanda, but the next step by the British armed forces was still under discussion.
Recce party The 43-strong British reconnaissance party, led by Royal Marines Brig. Jonathan Thomson, has reported back. Further information from an RAF reconnaissance flight was being studied before any firm decision on the need for, and size of, any British force.
SWEEPING CHANGES are under way for the Royal Navy's Surveying Squadron - not just in its role, but in the colour of its new generation of ships. It is likely that invitations to tender will go out early next year for a new class of three hi-tech survey ships. But as in the case of HMS Scott, the latest ship to be built for the squadron, the traditional survey livery of white with buff funnels will be scrapped, and the new vessels will be warship grey. The change of colour emphasises the squadron's much closer involvement with warfare and its full integration with the Surface Flotilla. Routine surveying for the making of charts is now a relatively minor part of its business.
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No "civilianisatiorT Senior officers are confident that an internal debate on "civilianisation" of the squadron has been won. They have shown that it is cheaper and more effective to have the ships manned entirely by RN personnel and under the White Ensign, especially as their warfare role has become paramount. Another factor in the survival of the squadron is the remarkably leaner manning and greater productivity which will be a feature of the new vessels. They will have replaced Herald. Bulldog and Bougie by the year 2000, and although They and HMS Scott represent a threefold increase in the tonnage of the squadron, advanced technology will almost halve the number of personnel at sea, and crew rotation will increase productivity by at least 180 days a year. "These are dramatic changes which can be achieved with the proposed new ships." Capt Hugh May. Captain (Hydrography), told Navy News. "Herald and the coastal • Turn to back page
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Flash message! THIS MESSAGE^, spelt out by the ship's company of HMS Invincible was timely in more ways than one. Thanks to digital technology, the negative was transmitted from the ship in the Gulf to an image receiver at the Surface Flotilla Photographic Section in Portsmouth, and within hours of being sent was on the front page of Navy News - just in time for our deadline. • Photographer was ship's cameraman, LA(PHOT) Colin Burden. • See page 19 for more news from the Gulf.
Q HONG KONG COUNTDOWN p20-21 J NATO's NAVAL FOCUS p12-13 Q LETTERS p6-7
a RNA p23 a SPORT p38-39