Hong Kong Sea Cadet Corps

香港海事青年團

Hong Kong Sea Cadet Corps is a youth organization based in Hong Kong and formed in 1968 by former Royal Naval Reserve officers by the creation of Hong Kong Law (Hong Kong Sea Cadet Corps Ordinance)[1]

The HKSCC was linked to British Armed Forces' Combined Cadet Force and Sea Cadet Corps (United Kingdom). Since the handover in 1997, the HKSCC is mostly a government funded organization and does not have any links to the People's Liberation Army Navy. It also receives financial support from Hong Kong Jockey Club and The Community Chest of Hong Kong.

Based in Diamond Hill, Kowloon, the 1800 strong HKSCC has 16 training units and two nautical centres (Stanley Bay and Sai Kung).

Rank & Rates

HKSCC adopts the ranking system from the Royal Navy and their Sea Cadet program:

Junior Rates \ Cadets
Senior Rates \ Instructors
Junior Officers
Senior Officers

Source: Ranks & Ratings of the Hong Kong Sea Cadet Corps

Uniform

Officers, instructors and cadets wear dark navy berets, blue shirts, dark navy blue trousers and black boots namely Action Working Dress (AWD) during routine trainings. In occasion of parades or other public events they will wear white (summer) or blue (winter) dress uniforms similar to the Royal Navy uniform worn by officers, senior and junior rates respectively.

Weapons

The Hong Kong Sea Cadet Corps Ceremonial Guard parade out with the replica Enfield L85A1/ (known as SA80 in Royal Navy) rifle.

Facilities

Training Ships or TS are land base training units for the HKSCC around the territory. Some are named after Her Majesty's Ships of the Royal Navy.

Training Centres

Training Launch


Disbanded Units

Awards

Hong Kong Sea Cadet Corps issues their own awards to their members and are not part of the government issued Orders, decorations, and medals of Hong Kong. The medals and clasps are modelled after the ones awarded by the MOD of the United Kingdom:

See also

References

External links


This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, November 12, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.