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Thunder
clap heard in Fiji
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Fire crews undergo training in the newly completed DC firefigthter
trainer, during Exercise Kurukuru in Suva, Fiji
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Pacific
Patrol Boat crews from Fiji, Tonga, Tuvalu and Sea Trainers
from the RANs Minor War Vessel Sea Training Unit take
part in training exercises including tactical baton instruction.
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By
LEUT Brad Bower, RFN
The first multi-national maritime exercise to be conducted in South
West Pacific was successfully hosted by the Republic of Fiji Military
Forces (RFMF) recently.
Exercise Kurukuru (Fijian for thunder) the brainchild of the CMDR
Bill Naupoto, RFN (Chief of Fiji Navy) and CMDR Mick Stone, RAN
(HGSCS HMAS Cerberus) saw the waters of Fiji a hive of activity.
Pacific Patrol Boats (PPBs) from the Pacific nations of Fiji, Tonga,
Tuvalu and Sea Trainers from the RANs Minor War Vessel Sea
Training Unit congregated in Suva, Fiji, for the start of the eight-day
exercise.
The harbour phase saw participating countries receive presentations
and instruction on boarding operations theory including international
law considerations and roles of FFA, search and rescue, firefighting
training in the newly completed DC firefighter trainer, small arms
and tactical baton instruction.
The harbour phase also saw a request from the Maritime Surveillance
Centre Fiji resulting in RFNS Kikau boarding and apprehending the
Vanuatu registered long liner Lian Chi Sheng, found operating illegally
within Fijis EEZ with shark product to the value of 95,000
FJD. This case is currently being processed through the Fiji courts.
The sea phase saw the command teams and their respective ship companies
placed through a series of mariner skills, boarding operations and
first aid assistance exercises, all executed under the watchful
eye of CMDR Mark Burling (CST to MWVSTU) and his Staff Navigation
Officer LCDR The Jackal Kraus, RANR.
The MSAs, LCDR Mike Gough (MSA Fiji), LCDR Mark Korsten (MSA Tonga)
and their respective technical advisers, ably assisted the Fiji
Navys STG as ships companies were rotated through the
array of serialised incidents.
All stakeholders agreed that the obvious benefits to interacting
on a bi-annual basis with our Pacific neighbours and improving the
interoperability between Pacific nation Navies and maritime police
units would see a more confident and overt posture being projected
by nations like Fiji in policing our individual maritime boundaries.
With the universal acceptance received in individual post exercise
reports the CMDR RFMF, CDRE Bainimarama, hopes that future
Kurukuru exercise includes a larger participation of sea trainers
from the RANs elite Minor War Vessel Sea Training Unit and
the inclusion of RAN and French Naval assets to establish a truly
multi-national maritime exercise for
the SW Pacific region.
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