On Tuesday, the ICG chief commissioned a squadron (the third) of the made-in-India Dhruv MK-III choppers at Porbandar in Gujarat in a bid to strengthen the Coast Guard's operations in the northwest

Indian Coast Guard director-general VS Pathania on Tuesday flew the recently-commissioned Advanced Light Helicopter (ALH) Dhruv MK-III helicopter and landed it on a ship located in the Arabian Sea. These helicopters will 'enhance the range and capability of the ship', he said.

"It is a made-in-India helicopter that has strengthened our reach and capability. These helicopters are force multipliers when they mark on ships, they enhance the range and capability of the ship multi-fold because of their speed and endurance," Pathania explained to news agency ANI.

On Tuesday, he commissioned a squadron (the third) of the made-in-India Dhruv MK-III choppers at Porbandar in Gujarat in a bid to strengthen the Coast Guard's operations in the northwest.

According to officials, the choppers can fulfil both reconnaissance and offensive roles as they have 12.7 mm heavy machine guns that can hit targets at a range of 1,800 metres. The induction boosts the Coast Guard's maritime surveillance and recon capabilities, officials said yesterday.

The ALH Dhruv Mk III is an 'indigenously designed and developed, twin-engine, multi-role, multi-mission new generation helicopter' made by Bangalore-based Hindustan Aeronautics Limited (HAL) and boosts the Indian government's 'Aatmanirbhar defence' philosophy.

Designed for utility roles in the defence services, one version comes with an electronic warfare suite and a countermeasure system, among other features.

It also has weapon systems and mission sensors that include a turret gun, air-to-air and air-to-ground missiles, a helmet-pointing system, an infra-red jammer and an obstacle avoidance system.