This year marks the 25th anniversary of China's first participation in United nations peacekeeping missions. The two and half decades have witnessed China's diligence in fulfilling its international responsibilities.
In April 1990, China sent five military observers to the UN Truce Supervision Organization, which monitors and reports violations of cease-fire agreements in the Middle East.
According to the Ministry of National Defense, over 30,000 Chinese peacekeepers have served overseas, with 10 of them losing their lives.
Chinese peacekeepers have built or repaired over 11,000 km of road and more than 300 bridges. They have removed 9,400 mines or unexploded devices, and received 149,000 patients.
KEY FORCE FOR WORLD PEACE
As a permanent member of the UN Security Council, China takes a serious attitude toward peacekeeping missions, which are conducted under the authorization of the Council.
Li Tiantian, deputy head of the department in charge of China's peacekeeping mission under the Ministry of National Defense, said the country has a tradition of cherishing peace.
China endured a turbulent century from 1840 to 1949, making Chinese people value peace and become determined to safeguard it, Li added.
As China's national strength has risen over the past 25 years, its peacekeeping presence has grown, with more personnel and diversified tasks.
With the dispatch of a battalion to South Sudan earlier this month, the types of staff sent by China for the missions expanded from engineering, transportation, medical and military observers to whole infantry divisions.
Presently, the number of Chinese peacekeepers in mission areas around the world stands at 2,720, the most in the five permanent member countries of the UN Security Council. China's share of peacekeeping funds stands at the sixth in UN member states, and the biggest in developing countries.