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| Chinese frontier guards with police dogs
are ready for orders in the suburb of Yining, northwest China's Xinjiang
Uygur Autonomous Region, Aug. 25, 2006. (Xinhua
Photo) |
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Urumqi, Aug. 26 (Xinhua) -- China started the second phase of its joint
anti-terror dill with its western neighbor Kazakhstan at 9:30 a.m. on Saturday
in Yining, western China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.
The "Tianshan-I (2006)" exercise in Yining will last till Saturday noon,
the Chinese police authority announced, with Chinese troops mainly composed of
border police and anti-terror special force in Xinjiang.
Some 700 police force are deployed on the game equipped with advanced
weapons including armed helicopters and armored anti-riot vehicles, the police
said.
The Yining game consists of five parts, simulating a battle in which
Chinese guards will gradually force the terrorists into a narrow valley and
cliff caves, the source said.
Around 100 observers from member states of the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization (SCO) which includes China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, are in Yining to evaluate the drill.
The drill is the first ever joint anti-terrorism exercise between the two
countries' law enforcement bodies and special forces within the framework of
Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO).
China and Kazakhstan on Thursday finished the first phase of the drill in
Kazakhstan's eastern Almaty region.
China's police authority said the exercise was held to demonstrate SCO's
latest progress in combating terrorists in the region, namely the "three evil
forces" of terrorists, splittists and extremists.
"The exercise will help establish SCO's active role in maintaining regional
security and stability," said Men Hongwei, China's vice minister of public
security and commander of the Chinese troops for the drill.
Men said the police force will also explore new patterns of security
cooperation through the exercise, noting that both traditional combating forces
like cavalry and the modern ones are participating in the drill.
China shared a 1,700-kilometer border with Kazakhstan, the longest after
its boundary with Russia. Dr. Feng Yujun, of the China Institute of Contemporary
International Relations, said the two countries settled border disputes in 1999,
and it is of great political and strategic significance for the two countries to
have cross-border anti-terror cooperation.
A number of anti-terror exercises have been held among SCO member states,
including the war game codenamed "Peaceful Mission - 2005" held by Chinese and
Russian forces. The member states will stage another round of anti-terrorism
military exercise in Russia next year. Enditem
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