China to send warships to fight Somali piracy
December 19, 2008 00:00:00
BEIJING, Dec 18 (Reuters): China will send warships to the seas off Somalia to help international efforts to fight piracy there, the Foreign Ministry said Thursday, in what would be the first operation of its kind for Beijing.
NATO ships began anti-piracy operations off the Somali coast in late October, but they have failed to stop the rampant hijackings, and other nations are now pitching in.
A multilateral force rescued the Chinese ship, Zhenhua 4, from Somali pirates Wednesday. Piracy in the Gulf of Aden and Indian Ocean off Somalia has become a major headache as it pushes up insurance costs or forces ships to take alternative routes.
"China is making active preparations and the related deployments to send warships to the Gulf of Aden," Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao told a news briefing, though he declined to give details.
A Chinese newspaper said China would send three ships to Somalia to prevent further attacks, but that report could not be independently confirmed.
Earlier this month, a prominent Chinese military strategist, Major-General Jin Yinan, urged the government to send ships in comments reflecting debate about combating piracy in a country which has generally confined its navy to waters near home.
China says its increasingly high-tech military forces are purely for defensive purposes. It has traditionally kept troops close to home and out of international operations, reflecting a doctrine of non-interference in other nations' affairs. But its growing wealth and influence have led to calls for it to take a greater role protecting world peace, even as Western nations fret about its increasing military power.
Another report adds: More than 370,000 chickens have been culled in China's eastern province of Jiangsu after an outbreak of the H5N1 strain of bird flu, say officials, report agencies.
The outbreak is thought to be the first in mainland China since June.
Meanwhile, a man has reportedly contracted the virus in Cambodia, while Taiwan is investigating suspected infection among birds.
The death of a teenage girl from H5N1 was announced in Egypt on Tuesday, and a bird cull is also under way in India.