| INSNetaji Subhas | |
|---|---|
| Kolkata,West Bengal in India | |
| Site information | |
| Type | Naval shore establishment |
| Owner | Ministry of Defence |
| Operator | Indian Navy |
| Condition | Operational |
| Site history | |
| In use | 1943 - present |
| Garrison information | |
| Current commander | Commodore Ajay Yadav[1] |
INS Netaji Subhas is a basedepot ship in theIndian Navy. It is ashore establishment that provides administrative and logistics support to visiting Indian Navy ships, submarines, aircraft and other allied and foreign navy units at theKolkata andHaldia ports. The base also provides support to its allied units like WOT (Kolkata),Naval Armament Inspectorate, Electrical and Machinery Trials Unit, Machinery Trials Unit, NLC,Services Selection Board(DH) and 5N DET and allSainik Schools and NCC Units in State of West Bengal and North East States.[2]
The base has six motorboats including twofast interceptor craft (FICs) operating directly under NOIC (West Bengal).[3][4]
The crest of the unit depicts the Red Fort against a blue background in the top half and light green foreground in the bottom half. The unit also undertakes annual ex-servicemen meets where matters concerning ESM Welfare such as pension, healthcare, career counselling and common grievances are discussed.[5]
The naval base in the port city of Calcutta (nowKolkata) began with a small HMI Naval Office under a naval control of the shipping officer, in the then Marine House.[citation needed] The port of Calcutta was strategic important duringWorld War II so the Allied naval presence in India increased to safeguard and strengthen its maritime assets inEast India and augment the logistic support capability toAllied units and later Indian naval ships operating in theBay of Bengal.[citation needed]
Thus from Marine House in 1940 to a more conspicuous HMIS Hoogly in 1943 to INS Hoogly port Independence grew the Naval footprint in the East. INS Hoogly was renamed INS Netaji Subhas on 5 July 1974 and the base gradually changed in line with the growing importance of the eastern seaboard to trade, security and diplomacy.[6]