SHIJIAZHUANG, June 12 (Xinhua) -- The ASEAN plus three (China, Japan, the
Republic of Korea), also known as the "10+3", workshop on disaster relief by
armed forces concluded here Thursday afternoon, as participants reached a basic
consensus to step up cooperation.
The military officers at the three-day workshop agreed that the 13
countries' armed forces should work hand-in-hand to face the challenges of
massive natural disasters, and they urged the early establishment of a
coordinating mechanism within the 10+3 framework, according to Cui Yafeng, who
chaired the workshop.
Cui, deputy head of the Field Army Commanding Academy of the Chinese
People's Liberation Army (PLA) in Shijiazhuang, capital of north China's Hebei
Province, said the workshop made positive achievements, gathering many
constructive ideas about establishing coordinating mechanisms and making
relevant laws regarding 10+3 joint disaster relief.
He said the officers agreed that the achievements of the workshop should be
submitted to decision-making departments in each country and its armed forces.
Held as China and Myanmar were coping with the aftermath of a massive quake
and a cyclone disaster, respectively, the workshop had prompted the 10+3 nations
to speed up the pace of enhanced disaster relief cooperation.
The workshop will be held here again next year at the PLA Academy and
possibly upgraded to a forum covering more non-traditional security issues, said
Cui.
The officers focused on the discussion of practical disaster relief
cooperation among the 10+3 nations, such as coordinating mechanisms and standard
operating procedures.
They also watched a field drill Wednesday by the PLA's Bethune Military
Medical College in Shijiazhuang, a 70-year-old college established by Norman
Bethune. The devoted Canadian doctor worked in China during the second World
War.
The college also joined in the disaster relief in Sichuan Province.