Ploughshares into Swords

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In the days following independence from the British, Sri Lanka (then Ceylon) was truly an island of serendipity, deserving the name of Serendib that had been bestowed upon it by early travellers. When the Ceylon army was raised in 1949, under the command of a British peer, Brigadier the Earl of Caithness, it had a mere 3000 men.

The Royal Ceylon Navy, as it was then called, was raised a couple of years later and was indeed tiny, with just a couple of hundred men. Its pride and joy was its single ship HMCyS Vijaya, previously the HMS Flying Fish, an ocean-going minesweeper bought from the British. Old navy salts still chuckle about the Vijaya´s first voyage to England under the RCyN flag. Its docking at Plymouth was greeted by a local newspaper with the memorable headline "The Fleet Is In!"

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Himal Southasian
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