Hundreds of people from 15 countries are carried away from combat zone to safety
China has joined the elite humanitarian club of countries that are able to bring non-nationals to safety from danger zones, after evacuating hundreds of Chinese citizens and foreigners from war-torn Yemen.
The People's Liberation Army navy won global plaudits by conducting four major evacuations from two ports against a backdrop of gunfire and explosions.
Any single evacuation operation requires a considerable amount of planning and coordination. However, the obstacles faced when taking 279 foreigners from 15 countries to safety increase dramatically, not least because of the language difficulties.
To do it just days after you have evacuated your own nationals makes it all the more remarkable, observers said.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Beijing said in a statement on its website on Thursday that 10 foreign governments - Pakistan, Ethiopia, Singapore, Italy, Germany, Poland, Ireland, Britain, Canada and Yemen - had requested China's help.
Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying said it was the first time China had carried out a specific evacuation of foreign nationals from a danger zone.
The first mission took place in the southern port city of Aden on March 29 when 122 Chinese people were evacuated. Another mission involving 449 Chinese people was carried out from the Red Sea port of Hodeidah on March 30, and a third mission, evacuating 225 foreigners from 10 countries from Aden, took place on Thursday.
On Monday, the frigate Linyi embarked on the fourth mission. The ministry said it carried the last group of 24 Chinese nationals who wished to be evacuated from the country from Hodeidah to Djibouti. At the request of the Sri Lankan government, the vessel also carried 45 Sri Lankans.
Hua said the Chinese embassy and consulate general in Yemen "are temporarily closed" in light of the worsening security situation, and all the remaining diplomatic staff in the country boarded the Linyi.
Yemen has been devastated by a brutal civil war, and the situation became even more critical on March 26 when Saudi Arabia launched airstrikes on the Houthi rebels with the participation of other Gulf states. Getting non-Yemenis out of Aden, near the entrance to the Red Sea, became a matter of extreme urgency.
Adrian Edwards, a spokesman for the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees, told China Daily that the situation in Yemen was "particularly tragic as it affects everyone there".
The country has a large displaced population from Africa, in particular Somalia, because of its strategic position, Edwards said.
Mudassir Waseem, a 13-year-old Pakistani, told Xinhua News Agency on board the Linyi, the vessel that evacuated the foreign nationals, that he could not restrain his delight at the thought of returning home.
Pakistani Defense Minister Khawaja Asif told Chinese reporters in Islamabad, "We are really, really grateful to our Chinese brothers."
Poland's Ministry of Foreign Affairs on Friday expressed its gratitude to China for providing assistance in evacuating four Polish residents from Aden.
Protecting vessels
Abeer Etefa, a spokeswoman for the World Food Program, said that "it is very difficult to provide assistance when the safety of your own staff is at stake".
Etefa told China Daily that "it is a very difficult situation in Sanaa (the Yemeni capital) right now, also in Aden, as well as many parts of the country". She described Yemen as "one of the most insecure countries in the world, not least in terms of food supplies".