The Star Malaysia

Promote peace

Xi tells soldiers serving in Djibouti to show a good image

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President Xi tells China’s soldiers serving in Djibouti to show a good image.

BEIJING: Troops serving at China’s first overseas military base, in the Horn of Africa country of Djibouti, should help promote peace and stability, President Xi Jinping told them in a video chat, encouragin­g them to promote a good image.

China formally opened the base in August on the same day as the People’s Liberation Army marked its 90th birthday. It is China’s first overseas naval base, although Beijing officially describes it as a logistics facility.

Djibouti’s position on the northweste­rn edge of the Indian Ocean has fuelled worry in India that it would become another of China’s “string of pearls” military alliances and assets ringing India, including Bangladesh, Myanmar and Sri Lanka.

Speaking to China’s Djibouti-based forces during a visit to a joint battle command centre in Beijing, Xi “got a good understand­ing” of the base’s operations and the lives of the soldiers there, China’s Defence Ministry said late on Friday.

Xi “encouraged them to establish a good image for China’s military and promote internatio­nal and regional peace and stability”, the ministry said. The soldiers responded that they would not let Xi or China down, it said.

China began constructi­on of the base in Djibouti last year.

It will be used to resupply navy ships taking part in peacekeepi­ng and humanitari­an missions off the coasts of Yemen and Somalia, in particular.

Xi is overseeing an ambitious military modernisat­ion programme, including developing capabiliti­es for China’s forces to operate far from home.

During his visit to the command centre, Xi also instructed the armed forces to improve their combat capability and readiness for war, the ministry said.

Xi said progress in joint operation command systems, especially in efficiency at the regional level, was needed and troops must conduct training under combat conditions.

Djibouti, which is about the size of Wales, is at the southern entrance to the Red Sea on the route to the Suez Canal.

The tiny, barren nation sandwiched between Ethiopia, Eritrea and Somalia also hosts US, Japanese and French bases.

There has been persistent speculatio­n in diplomatic circles that China would build other such bases, in Pakistan for example, but the government has dismissed this.

 ??  ?? Boosting military capabiliti­es: Xi visiting the Central Military Commission joint battle command centre in Beijing as part of an inspection tour. — Xinhua
Boosting military capabiliti­es: Xi visiting the Central Military Commission joint battle command centre in Beijing as part of an inspection tour. — Xinhua

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