CHINA TO SEND 700 TROOPS TO SOUTH SUDAN TO ASSIST U.N. MISSION
(Reuters) - China said on Thursday it will
send 700 troops to join a U.N. peacekeeping mission in South Sudan, where
fighting has threatened Beijing's oil investments.
The troops will assist the U.N. with
protecting citizens and humanitarian workers and in other security-related
activities in the newly independent country, said Defence Ministry spokesman
Geng Yansheng in a statement.
The location of the troops and the timing of
the deployment were still being negotiated, the statement said.
U.N. officials have previously said it would
be the first time China had contributed a battalion to a U.N. peacekeeping
mission. Last year China sent a smaller "protection unit" to join a
U.N. mission in Mali.
China has more than 1,800 peacekeepers in
Africa, China's Foreign Ministry said earlier this month.
China has played an unusually active
diplomatic role in South Sudan.
About five percent of China's oil imports
came from South Sudan when it was pumping at full tilt. The state firm China
National Petroleum Corp. has a 40 percent stake in a joint venture developing
the fields.
The nine-month-old rebellion in South Sudan
threatens Beijing's oil investments. Chinese officials have worked with Western
diplomats to help regional African mediators push for a halt to the fighting.
(The story is corrected to fix spelling of
Defence Ministry spokesman in paragraph 2.)
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