The British destroyer HMS Diamond joins operation SOPHIA
An unusual scene took place in the Central Mediterranean last Sunday as a 25 strong team of Royal Marines and Royal Navy sailors from HMS Diamond boarded a suspect vessel in the Mediterranean. That vessel’s name? HMS Enterprise .
Diamond was conducting her final Boarding Exercise prior to officially taking up her position as part of operation SOPHIA , the European Naval Force Operation to counter human trafficking and the flow of illegal arms into Libya.
Enterprise, which has been a part of that mission for the past few months, recently made the news when she rescued over 700 people in distress off the Libyan coast; on Sunday she played the part of a “suspect” vessel in the exercise to give Diamond’s boarding team a unique training opportunity.
The Diamond’s Royal Navy Boarding Officer leads a team of 15 Royal Navy sailors together with a 10 strength detachment of Royal Marines “We completed a pretty intense period of training prior to this deployment in the UK, but this gave us a brilliant opportunity to exercise all those skills we’ve learnt and to fully integrate with the Royal Marines”
On her departure from Portsmouth last month, Diamond embarked a Royal Marines boarding team who will work seamlessly with the Royal Navy team already on board. For some of the Marines this is the first time on board a Warship.
Following a brief stop in Gibraltar to embark a state-of-the-art Wildcat Helicopter , Diamond proceeded towards her patrol area in the Eastern Mediterranean to the North of Libya where she will spend her time in EUNAVFOR MED operation SOPHIA monitoring suspicious shipping activity and conducting boarding operations on suspect vessels under the mandate of a United Nations Security Council Resolution.
Commanding Officer of the British destroyer said: “Diamond’s deployment on this mission demonstrates just how versatile the Type 45 Destroyer is. We are able to monitor the airspace and situation over the entire Libyan coast, whilst at the same time conducting boarding operations to stop the flow of illegal arms into the country”.
On the 20 June 2016, the Council of the European Union reinforced EUNAVFOR MED core mandate with two supporting tasks: the capacity building and training of, and information sharing with, the Libyan Coastguard and Navy, based on a request by the legitimate Libyan authorities taking into account the need for Libyan ownership; and the contributing to information sharing, as well as implementation of the UN arms embargo on the high seas off the coast of Libya on the basis of a new UN Security Council Resolution.
Last 30 August the EU Political and Security Committee decided to formally commence the two above-mentioned supporting tasks.