Source:
http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/news/china/2015/china-150403-sputnik01.htm?_m=3n%2e002a%2e1384%2eka0ao00b2h%2e19rb
03 Apr 2015
In an unprecedented move, the Chinese military sent a warship to Yemen to evacuate 225 foreign nationals from the conflict-ridden country.
The operation marks the first time the Chinese military has helped other countries evacuate their citizens from a war zone. A statement released by the China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said evacuees were picked up from Aden, Yemen's second city, and transported across the Red Sea to Djibouti, from where they can take flights home. The naval frigate was redirected there from the coast of Somalia, where it had carried out anti-piracy patrols.
The evacuees consisted of nationals from 10 different countries, the majority of whom were Pakistanis, at 176. Chinese State television showed the foreign nationals aboard the naval frigate arrive to Djibouti, with footage showing children stepping off the warship and waving Chinese flags.
Speaking to the Associated Press, foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said 'the Chinese government has taken special action to help with the evacuation of foreign citizens.'
According to the foreign ministry's statement, the operation came after the governments of Pakistan, Ethiopia, Singapore, Italy, Germany, Poland, Ireland, the UK, Canada, and Yemen requested China's help.
China has used its warships once in the past for a similar operation, when in 2011 it evacuated 30,000 people from a war-ravaged Libya. However, at the time, China had only evacuated its own citizens from the conflict zone.
The recent operation is illustrative of the ongoing transition in China's role in the international community, whereby the once-reclusive country is becoming increasingly active in humanitarian aid and relief abroad.
The country drew international praise last year after it sent troops to Liberia to help build a treatment center and transport medical supplies in response to the Ebola outbreak. In 2013, Beijing also sent a hospital ship to the Philippines in the aftermath of the Typhoon Haiyan.
'China has been keen to learn from the experience of other countries on how to evacuate people, especially after Libya,' A senior Western diplomat in Beijing said to Reuters. 'It's good to see China taking more of an interest in this.'
Yemen has become the site of intense conflict since last September, when Iran-back Shiite Houthi fighters seizes the capital city of Sanaa from Saudi and American-backed President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi. A Saudi led bombing campaign against Houthi forces has plunged the country into more violence, as UN reports estimate that over 500 people have been killed in the past two weeks and more than 1,700 injured.
http://www.globalsecurity.org/wmd/library/news/china/2015/china-150403-sputnik01.htm?_m=3n%2e002a%2e1384%2eka0ao00b2h%2e19rb
Chinese Show of Naval Force: Chinese Navy
Rescues Foreigners from Yemen's Aden
Sputnik News03 Apr 2015
In an unprecedented move, the Chinese military sent a warship to Yemen to evacuate 225 foreign nationals from the conflict-ridden country.
The operation marks the first time the Chinese military has helped other countries evacuate their citizens from a war zone. A statement released by the China's Ministry of Foreign Affairs said evacuees were picked up from Aden, Yemen's second city, and transported across the Red Sea to Djibouti, from where they can take flights home. The naval frigate was redirected there from the coast of Somalia, where it had carried out anti-piracy patrols.
The evacuees consisted of nationals from 10 different countries, the majority of whom were Pakistanis, at 176. Chinese State television showed the foreign nationals aboard the naval frigate arrive to Djibouti, with footage showing children stepping off the warship and waving Chinese flags.
Speaking to the Associated Press, foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said 'the Chinese government has taken special action to help with the evacuation of foreign citizens.'
According to the foreign ministry's statement, the operation came after the governments of Pakistan, Ethiopia, Singapore, Italy, Germany, Poland, Ireland, the UK, Canada, and Yemen requested China's help.
China has used its warships once in the past for a similar operation, when in 2011 it evacuated 30,000 people from a war-ravaged Libya. However, at the time, China had only evacuated its own citizens from the conflict zone.
The recent operation is illustrative of the ongoing transition in China's role in the international community, whereby the once-reclusive country is becoming increasingly active in humanitarian aid and relief abroad.
The country drew international praise last year after it sent troops to Liberia to help build a treatment center and transport medical supplies in response to the Ebola outbreak. In 2013, Beijing also sent a hospital ship to the Philippines in the aftermath of the Typhoon Haiyan.
'China has been keen to learn from the experience of other countries on how to evacuate people, especially after Libya,' A senior Western diplomat in Beijing said to Reuters. 'It's good to see China taking more of an interest in this.'
Yemen has become the site of intense conflict since last September, when Iran-back Shiite Houthi fighters seizes the capital city of Sanaa from Saudi and American-backed President Abd-Rabbu Mansour Hadi. A Saudi led bombing campaign against Houthi forces has plunged the country into more violence, as UN reports estimate that over 500 people have been killed in the past two weeks and more than 1,700 injured.
People's Liberation Army Navy | Bernhard Zand wrote in Der Spiegel September 10, 2012: "One country that could give China good advice, a country whose historians are well versed in naval policies and in arms races on the high seas, is Germany. A century ago, Berlin stood where Beijing is now, as an emerging economic power that was admired, envied and feared. At the time, Germany wanted a navy that would broadcast its self-confidence to the world, one that could rival the world’s greatest naval force of the era, the British Navy. That plan almost succeeded. But it didn’t end well." |
BRANCHES | ||||||||
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Surface Forces | Submarine Force | Naval Air Force | ||||||
Coastal Defense Force | Marine Corps | |||||||
Commander, PLAN | ||||||||
North Sea Fleet | East Sea Fleet | South Sea Fleet | ||||||
Submarine, NSF | Submarine, ESF | Submarine, SSF | ||||||
Conventional Sub Flotilla | Conventional Sub Flotilla | Conventional Sub Flotilla | ||||||
1st Nuclear Sub Flotilla | ||||||||
Surface Force, NSF | Surface Force, ESF | Surface Force, SSF | ||||||
Destroyer Flotilla | Destroyer Flotilla | Destroyer Flotilla | ||||||
Speedboat Flotilla | Speedboat Flotilla | Speedboat Flotilla | ||||||
Suport Vessel Flotilla | Suport Vessel Flotilla | Suport Vessel Flotilla | ||||||
Landing Ship Flotilla | Landing Ship Flotilla | |||||||
Sub Chaser / Frigate Flotilla | ||||||||
Naval AF, NSF | Naval AF, ESF | Naval AF, SSF | ||||||
U/I Fighter DIV | 4th Fighter DIV | 8th Fighter DIV | ||||||
U/I Fighter/Bomber DIV | 6th Fighter DIV | 9th Fighter DIV | ||||||
U/I Bomber DIV | Radar Brigade | Radar Brigade | ||||||
Radar Brigade | ||||||||
AAA Regiment | ||||||||
Coastal Defense Force, NSF | Coastal Defense Force, ESF | Coastal Defense Force, SSF | ||||||
Shore-to-Ship Missile RGT | Shore-to-Ship Missile BN | Shore-to-Ship Missile BN | ||||||
AAA Regiment | AAA Regiment | |||||||
Shore-Ship Missile and AAA RGT | ||||||||
Marine Corps, SSF | ||||||||
1st Marine BDE | ||||||||
164th Marine BDE |
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