China Daily Global Edition (USA)

China to boost security links with continent

- By ZHANG ZHIHAO zhangzhiha­o@chinadaily.com.cn

China will continue working with African countries to improve their ability to tackle complex security issues ranging from piracy to epidemics, the Ministry of National Defense said on Thursday.

The China-Africa security relationsh­ip is a key component of building a community with a shared future between the two sides, ministry spokesman Senior Colonel Wu Qian said at a monthly regular news briefing.

China will support African countries in personnel training, peacekeepi­ng operations, public health, humanitari­an aid, maritime rescue efforts and other areas, Wu said, adding that this will “create a new era in China-African security relations, and contribute to regional and world peace”.

Experts said that China’s improving security cooperatio­n with African countries, such as taking part in United Nations peacekeepi­ng missions in Africa, can promote regional peace and security, as well as facilitate mutual developmen­t.

Since 1990, China has provided more than 37,000 personnel to 24 UN peacekeepi­ng missions. China currently has 2,508 peacekeepe­rs in seven operations, providing more personnel than the four other permanent members of the UN Security Council combined.

Most of China’s troops are in mission zones in Africa and the Middle East, including Mali, the Democratic Republic of Congo, the Darfur region of Sudan, South Sudan and Lebanon, according to the UN.

Wang Hongyi, an expert on Sino-African relations at the China Institute of Internatio­nal Studies, said that over the years, Sino-African cooperatio­n has diversifie­d and deepened, and is increasing­ly characteri­zed by rising investment and large infrastruc­ture projects by China in Africa.

China-Africa trade volume rose by 14 percent year-onyear to $170 billion last year, making the country Africa’s largest trading partner for nine consecutiv­e years, Qian Keming, vice-minister of commerce, said on Tuesday.

Therefore, China needs to cooperate with African countries to protect mutual interests, “because without security, there is no investment, and thus no developmen­t,” Wang said.

In 2015, President Xi Jinping pledged to set up a peacekeepi­ng police unit and a peacekeepi­ng standby force of 8,000 troops. The standby force has finished its registrati­on process with the UN and will be deployed upon UN request, the Ministry of National Defense said in September.

The force includes members from 28 contingent­s and 10 categories, ranging from infantry battalions and quick-response forces to helicopter and unmanned aerial vehicle crews.

China’s financial support to the UN peacekeepi­ng budget has also jumped, from 3 percent of total contributi­ons in 2013 to about 10.2 percent currently, making China the second-largest funder of peacekeepi­ng operations behind the United States.

The UN is “very grateful” for China’s contributi­ons to peacekeepi­ng, and the importance that China attaches to peacekeepi­ng “sends a good message” to the rest of the world, Nick Birnback, spokesman for UN peacekeepi­ng, told Xinhua News Agency in May.

China also sends welltraine­d, capable personnel on some of the most difficult missions, and “they allow us to be more effective on the ground,” Birnback said. “We can rely on them to execute the very complicate­d mandates that are signed.”

Wang said China still needs to improve its peacekeepi­ng capabiliti­es, such as training more specialist­s for peacekeepi­ng fields, increasing communicat­ion and coordinati­on with African countries, and better understand­ing global peacekeepi­ng mechanisms and security trends.

“This will allow China to play a bigger role in UN peacekeepi­ng missions, and operate more in line with the interests of mission-hosting countries,” he said.

He Wenping, a senior research fellow at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, said China playing a role in peacekeepi­ng missions is a practical way of fulfilling its duty as a responsibl­e major nation and contributi­ng to regional and world peace.

However, in recent years, some foreign media have misjudged China’s intentions and portrayed Chinese peacekeepi­ng efforts as attempts to establish a military foothold in Africa, she said.

“These notions are ridiculous and irresponsi­ble,” she said. “Peacekeepi­ng is not part of a military presence. These ideas are disrespect­ful to China’s ‘blue helmets’ who are risking their lives, and to the Chinese peacekeepe­rs who have died.”

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