China plans to train 5,000 troopers from developing countries over the next five years in a move that is expected to boost Beijing’s global security influence, the South China Morning Post reported.
The announcement, which appeared in a paper on Beijing’s Global Security Initiative (GSI) published on Tuesday, comes at a sensitive time as China’s overseas security footprint has worried its rivals.
The initiative, seen as an alternative to the Western-led security order, was first proposed by President Xi Jinping during the Boao Forum for Asia annual conference last April.
According to the GSI paper, Beijing plans to create more international platforms for exchange and cooperation to address security challenges in areas such as counterterrorism, cybersecurity, biosecurity and emerging technologies, with a view to improving governance capacity in non-traditional security.
China will also encourage more exchanges and cooperation among university-level military and police academies, the paper said.
It also said China was willing to provide 5,000 training opportunities for professionals from other developing countries over the next five years to help them address global security issues.
Li Wei, an anti-terrorism expert at the China Institutes of Contemporary International Relations (CICIR), said the plan for training and exchanges in non-traditional security fields, especially anti-terrorism, showed Beijing felt a responsibility to address global security challenges.
“(China) used to train anti-terrorism police officers and officials in countries such as Afghanistan and Pakistan, and now it will expand the scope of this cooperation. The training and exchanges aim to strengthen efficiency in bilateral and multilateral cooperation, such as in the anti-terrorism field,” Li said.
China’s efforts to boost multilateral and bilateral security training programmes have expanded in recent years, spreading to countries in the Middle East, the Pacific Islands and Central Asia. (Agencies)