Special Report: Sudan National
Reconcilation
ZHENGZHOU, Feb. 17 (Xinhua) -- China kicked off the deployment of its fifth peacekeeping mission to Sudan this
week, with 435 officers and soldiers to be sent in four groups, the Jinan
Military Command Area said Tuesday.
The first group of 105 peacekeepers Monday departed
for the African country from Zhengzhou, capital of central China's Henan
Province.
The entire team comprises 435 people from
engineering, transportation and medical corps of the Jinan Military Command
Area. They will be fully deployed in the Wau region in southwest Sudan by the
end of February, replacing the fourth peacekeeping team from China.
During the 8-month mission, their major tasks will be
repairing and maintaining traffic and civic facilities, and providing medical
services in the region, Wang Encheng, an official with the Jinan Military
Command Area, said one month ago when the team began to receive special training
in Zhengzhou.
This will be the second mission to Sudan for 72 team
members, Wang said.
China first sent peacekeepers to southern Sudan in
May 2006 to join the United Nations' peacekeeping efforts in the war-torn
region. The fourth group was deployed there in June last year.
The other two peacekeeping missions were conducted in
Sudan's Darfur region. In November 2007 and July 2008, China sent a total of 315
engineering corps personnel to join the UN-African Union Mission in Darfur
(UNAMID).