BEIJING, June 30 (Xinhua) -- With a third group of Chinese peacekeepers
sent to Sudan to replace their predecessors, China has sent more than 10,000
peacekeepers to participate in 18 UN peace-keeping missions.
At the request of the United Nations and UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon,
China decided to participate in a hybrid force of the United Nations and the
African Union.
China promised to send a 315-member engineering unit to Darfur. So far, the
first group of 143 engineers has been dispatched to Darfur, where it is at work.
"The remaining members of the engineering units to be sent to Darfur are
now ready for departure and will be fully deployed by mid-July," the Monday
edition of the PLA (People's Liberation Army) Daily quoted Wei Yanwei, vice
director of the Peace-Keeping Affairs Office of the Ministry of National
Defense, as saying.
China joined the UN Special Committee on Peace-Keeping Operations in 1988
and sent five military observers to the UN Truce Organization in 1990. In 1992,
400 engineering troops were sent for peacekeeping work in Cambodia. And, to
date, more than 10,000 Chinese peacekeepers have taken part in missions in such
countries as Congo, Libya, Lebanon and Sudan.
"China, as a permanent member of the UN Security Council, shoulders an
important responsibility in missions related to global peace and security, and
China's active participation in UN peace-keeping activities reflects its stance
to support the world body and its decisions," said Wei.
"Besides fulfilling peace-keeping tasks assigned by the United Nations,
Chinese peacekeepers help local people to improve their living standards," Wei
added.
The peacekeepers have built or repaired more than 200 bridges and 7,500
kilometers of roads and treated nearly 50,000 patients, official statistics
show.
"Chinese peacekeepers not only fulfill their obligations for peacekeeping
missions, but also convey Chinese people's friendship and love of peace to the
local people in destination countries," he said.