Haijian 75

History
 People's Republic of China
Name: China Haijian 75 (CMS 75)
Owner: South China Sea Branch, State Oceanic Administration
Operator: 7th Marine Surveillance Flotilla, South China Sea Fleet, China Marine Surveillance
Builder: Changzhou Shipyard, Huangpu Shipbuilding
Commissioned: October 26, 2010
General characteristics
Class and type: 1,000t-class Type-II Cutter
Displacement: 1,290 t
Length: 77.39 m
Beam: 10.4 m
Draught: 4 m
Propulsion: 4,760 shp
Speed: maximum > 20 knots
Range: 5,000 nmi
Complement: 43 personnel

Haijian 75 (Chinese: 海监75) is a China Marine Surveillance (CMS) ship in the 7th Marine Surveillance Flotilla of CMS's South China Sea Fleet. She is one of the fastest CMS ships in the second building plan. She was commissioned on October 26, 2010.[1]

Deployments

On October 25, 2012, Haijian 75 conducted cruise operations in waters around the disputed Diaoyu Islands. Through radio, personnel on Haijian 75 ordered nearby JCG ships to leave and collected evidence of JCG ships' presence.[2]

CMS ships of the same class, 1,000t-class Type-II, include Haijian 66.

CMS-75 was renamed CCG-3175 in July 2013.

References

  1. "Fastest Law Enforcement Ship Commissioned to CMS South China Sea Branch". Sina News (in Chinese). 27 October 2010. Retrieved 2 June 2013.
  2. "CMS Ships Expelled JCG Ships Infringing China's Sovereignty". China News (in Chinese). 20 May 2013. Retrieved 2 June 2013.
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