Among UN
peacekeepers known as the "Blue Berets" in the world's most troubled areas are
thousands of Chinese servicemen. They have committed themselves to jobs of
negotiation, supervision, rescue operation and rebuilding. They risk their own
safety and sometimes their very lives, and have won the respect of the world for
their work and dedication.
In this exclusive report, the Chinese blue berets talked about their
work and experience.
Always have a lurking danger
(By Li Bolin. Li was a UN military observer stationed in Cambodia.)
In 1992 the UN carried out a large-scale peacekeeping operation in
Cambodia, and about 15,000 peacekeeping troops and 500 military observers,
civilian policemen and other personnel were sent to the country. Around 800
person-times of Chinese engineers and over 100 Chinese military observers took
part in the operation and I served as a military observer from 1993 to 1994.
The operation involved a lot of risk. Cambodia is a country with a
total area of 180,000 sq km and a population of 8 million. Since 1970 it had
been embroiled in war and there were 10 million landmines laid under the ground.
Once I drove out with some other military observers to conduct an
inspection. We lost our way in a rubber plantation when we tried to take a
shortcut. After nearly five hours in the woods, we found a narrow footpath and
got out at last. Local farmers were very surprised to see us emerging from the
woods. They told us later that they called that place the "death woods" because
there were hundreds of landmines laid under the ground. No local villagers dared
go near it. We thought we were lucky to be able to survive.
As the general election was drawing near in Cambodia, relations among
different armed factions became tenser, and hostile activities against the blue
berets also increased. In May 1993 barracks of the Chinese engineers were
attacked, and two engineers were killed. As a result I was sent to probe into
the incident.
One day when I was driving on a highway I saw some 20 local militiamen
putting roadblocks on the way. I got off the car and tried to negotiate with
their leader. Suddenly a militiaman behind me began to fire at a group of
farmers who were trying to bypass the roadblocks to the other side of the
highway. Five people were killed. "Are you crazy? They are your fellowmen!" I
shouted to the leader. In a second, a gun was pointing at my head and a guy was
shouting at me. My translator was scared. He told me that the militia would do
the same thing to me if I uttered one more word. Then I was forced to turn back
and made a detour.
Many military observers in operations had similar experiences. For us
risk is our standing companion.
A reliable commander
(By Liu Meng. Liu was a military observer and peacekeeper in Iraq-Kuwait
Operation Region and the Middle East Operation Region.)
In the Iraq-Kuwait Region I served as a military observer and field
officer. In the Middle East Operation Region I served as a commander of a
peacekeeping troops in Egypt.
Operation in the Middle East has been going on for more than 50 years now.
It is the longest and also the first UN peacekeeping operation in the world.
Blue Berets in the Middle East Operation Region always tell a joke: The most
important contribution we have made to the world peace is not the peace in the
Middle East, but the template we've been making for other operations and lots of
peacekeepers it has trained.
Many foreign servicemen knew little about China when I was the
commander of the UN peacekeeping troops in Egypt. A US officer once worked with
me. I could see that he was quite nervous to work with a Chinese superior. One
day it was very hot and that officer looked unwell. I offered him some Rendan (A
kind of traditional Chinese medicine pills, which smells like throat lozenge.)
He refused to take them and said, "We American servicemen won't take any
unidentified medicine."
One day a clash erupted along the border and an Egyptian officer was
killed. I was at the HQs while the us officer was on duty at an observation
post. After I received the report, I told my Danish field officer to send a fax
to the observation post, stressing that patrol and other activities in that area
to be stopped. Later the Danish field officer told me that the US officer had
requested a 24-hour patrol in that area. I made a phone call to the post and
told him, "I'm glad that you request a 24-hour patrol. You are a conscientious
officer. But perhaps you don't understand the situation. Multinational force is
in charge of that area according to the 1980 Agreement reached among Israel,
Egypt, the UN and multinational forces. That's why we can't patrol there." He
could see that I was telling him the truth, and then he agreed. Later I heard
that he once told a colleague, "The commander is a kind serviceman. He's
professional."
We withdrew all UN observation posts and transition stations in Sinai
Peninsular when we streamlined our organization in Egypt Operation Region. But
Egypt still expected us to continue to patrol in that region. Then we had to
solve the communication problem. I happened to major in radio communication when
I studied in Tsinghua University. So I worked with other UN experts and set up
single-band radio transfer stations to cover the whole peninsular. Thus the
communication of the region recovered.
When it's my time to leave Egypt, I was decorated by the Egyptian
Defense Department in a ceremony. A brigadier from the department told me, " You
are the 16th commander of peacekeepers in Egypt. But you are the only one who
has won this honor."
That American officer also came to see me off. He smiled and told me,
"I thought that's some kind of narcotic when you once gave me the Chinese
medicine. You used it to make me to blab military intelligence." I also smiled,
"Don't be taken in by propaganda. We are good fellow peacekeepers." Before I
left I sent him some Rendan and balm oil.
Learn from practice
(By Yao Min. Yao was a military observer in West Sahara.)
Global Positioning System (GPS) was all we could depend on to found the
exact locations when patrolling in the world's biggest desert. The US Army
developed the system in 1973. The GPS we used then in West Sahara was a kind of
advanced jeep-mounted system.
Chinese military observers had no practical experience on the system.
But helped by their good command of English and repeated practice, Chinese
military observers mastered every technical details recorded on the system's
usage handbook, especially those about navigation in roadless terrain.
Later in a case that military observers were trapped in complex
roadless areas, a Chinese military observer guided the jeep back to correct
direction with the help of GPS. After that some Chinese observers were able to
teach other observers to use the system. Someone may say that was because these
Chinese people are smart. In fact, that was because we were active in learning
and practice.