By
Graham Davis
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Boarding
Team One gets a line of sight with MSA Bandicoot in preparation
for boarding during a joint exercise between the RAN and
NSW Water Police. MSA Bandicoot was the target for a practice
boarding by water police.
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Photo:
ABPH Yuri Ramsey
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WOB
Barry Pincombe assists the training of boarding party on
RHIB 2.
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Photo:
ABPH Nina Nikolin
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A Water Police officer stands guard on the bridge wing of
MSA Bandicoot during the boarding exercise on Sydney Harbour.
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Photo:
ABPH Yuri Ramsey
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RAN
minesweeper Bandicoot and DMSs Seahorse Mercator were siezed
by RAN and NSW Police boarding parties when suspected of carrying
drugs last week.
Steaming across Sydney Harbour, the crews of the two ships saw
RAN instructors and blue-overalled Water Police come alongside
in a pair of six-metre police RHIBs.
Seconds later rope ladders were thrown over rails. Boarding parties
scrambled up them.
Crew members challenged boarders but were soon suppressed.
Of course this was an exercise but never the less a very serious
drill.
As a consequence of September 11 there is a move to tighten security
at ports around the world.
That security will be enforced on July 1 when the International
Ship and Port Facility (ISPS) Code comes into operation.
The NSW Water Police will be vital in protecting ports in their
state through their Marine Operational Support Team (MOST).
Senior police realised the Water Police needed to be able to board
vessels while under way, whether they be in a harbour or open
sea.
Two six-metre RHIBs were bought and training organised through
the RAN, which of course has done thousands of boardings, both
compliant and non-compliant as part of duties in The Gulf.
Last week instructors from HMAS Cerberus, WO Barry Pincombe, CPO
Ray Beasy and CPO Jerry Savage began a course to put 12 new students
through and qualify four others as instructors.
Using land bases Garden Island, HMAS Waterhen and the Water Police
Headquarters at Pyrmont, the trio put the police through a series
of drills using two new police RHIBs.
On Wednesday, February 18, it was out onto Sydney Harbour to put
the skills to the test.
They were in for a surprise, however, because the instructors
had asked ten sailors from Fleet Base East to act as belligerent,
non-English speaking and possibly armed, crew members.
The boarding parties scrambled on to Bandicoot and Seahorse Mercator
in separate evolutions, frisking crew members, making
searches and herding them onto the forecastle.
We are drawing on the expertise and the experience of the
RAN and working with them to achieve a better trained water police
operative, Commander of the NSW Marine Area Command Detective
Superintendent Terry Dalton said.