Chinese President Xi Jinping promised support Monday for a
permanent UN police squad and African peacekeeping as he vowed a peaceful rise
for the Asian power.
Paying his first-ever visit to the United Nations, Xi took a new
step to address criticism that China has not taken responsiblity commensurate
with its growing size.
Xi said that China, which has increasingly joined multinational
defense efforts, would “take the lead” in setting up an 8,000-troop “permanent
peacekeeping police squad” that could be deployed at short notice.
Xi also announced $100 million in funding to the African Union to
support a similar rapid reaction force, as well as a broader 10-year, $1
billion UN-China “peace and development fund.”
China’s economy has soared in the past 15 years to become the
largest after the United States, and the world’s most populous nation has
sought to be treated as a major global power.
But China’s neighbors and the United States have voiced concern
over Beijing’s territorial claims, while Western nations have charged that Beijing’s
interest in poor nations is purely mercantile rather than focused on
development.
Xi hit back in his speech, saying China was “committed to peaceful
development.”
“No matter how the international landscape may evolve and how
strong China may become, China will never pursue hegemony, expansion or a
sphere of influence,” he said in an address to the United Nations.
Xi, however, said that the United Nations allowed all countries to
“choose their own sovereignty and development paths.”
The comment was likely a veiled allusion to the frequent criticism
of China’s human rights record, which includes the imprisonment of democracy
activists such as Nobel laureate Liu Xiaobo.
“All countries are equals. The big, strong and rich should not
bully the small, weak and poor,” Xi said.
Source:punchng
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