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China's mine-sweeping soldiers in Lebanon: China Miracle

TaiShang

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Editor's note: Li Jiang is one of the minesweepers of the 14th Chinese peacekeeping engineer detachment stationed in Lebanon. Since they arrived in the country, this special detachment have explored 1.96 million square meters of suspected minefields, found and removed 3,063 landmines, 15,673 unexploded bombs, and 504,783 metal objects of various kinds, creating three "China miracles" -- a record of zero casualties, taking only five days to obtain the minesweeping qualification certification and working at seven times the international average minesweeping speed. The following pictures, taken before this year's Army Day (August 1), record a day in the life of Li Jiang and his companions as they cope with dozens of dangerous situations.




Li Jiang checks all the minesweeping equipment before leaving on a special mission. As the vice chief of the minesweeping squad, Li gets up at 5:30 every morning, half an hour earlier than his colleagues, to check all the equipment and ensure nothing is amiss. [Photo/China.org.cn]


Li Jiang checks the windows to make sure they are all closed. The situation changes constantly, so two rules have been set for all the vehicles during an operation for safety reasons -- all the people at the site must wear bulletproof vests and helmets and all the windows must be closed. [Photo/China.org.cn]


The minesweeping team, composed of off-road transportation vehicles and ambulances, leaves the camp as soon as a phoned order comes through at 6:30 in the morning. [Photo/China.org.cn]


Wang Yunlong (second from left), the platoon leader, arranges and deploys his men for the day's operation. [Photo/China.org.cn]


Despite temperatures over 40 degrees Celsius, the minesweepers must wear special armor weighing 10 kilograms. Here, they are helping each other to put it on. [Photo/China.org.cn]


Before entering the minefield, the officers and men must debug the mine detectors to ensure all the equipment is working efficiently. [Photo/China.org.cn]


The minefield is always overgrown with weeds with dangers lurking on every side. This is the tough working environment which Li Jiang and his companions have to face every day. [Photo/China.org.cn]


Li Jiang works in the minefield with a mine detector in his hand. [Photo/China.org.cn]
 
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None of it would have been possible without the American bombs. US and China are partners in economic reconstruction. Won't Japan lend some aid?

We already do our fair share of cleaning up the mess...

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Good army engineers!
Who put the mines there in the first place?

Most likely years of wars and major skirmishes with Israel.

It is not just mines, I guess. Also booby-traps and cluster bombs/bomblets that did not go off. They can stay dormant for years until somebody touches them.



探雷器发现可疑目标后,李江对可疑处进行标示。[中国网图片库 叶洋萍 摄]
Li Jiang marks a suspected area as soon as the mine detector gives an indication. [Photo by Ye Yangping/China.org.cn]


探雷器发现可疑目标后,对可疑处进行人工挖掘。李江显得格外冷静,一点一滴、一举一动都是严格按照“SOP”标准作业程序进行。[中国网图片库 叶洋萍 摄]
Li Jiang begins to dig around the suspicious target after it is detected. He looks particularly calm. His every move is strictly in accordance with standard operation procedure (SOP). [Photo by Ye Yangping/China.org.cn]


经过几十分钟的探排、挖掘,发现的不是一枚地雷,而是一块完全锈蚀炸弹残片。[中国网图片库 叶洋萍 摄]
After a while, Li Jiang finds the object is only a rusty bomb fragment, not a landmine. [Photo by Ye Yangping/China.org.cn]


作业完毕,战友替换李江。他交待雷场情况,提醒战友注事事项。[中国网图片库 叶洋萍 摄]
Li Jiang is replaced by a colleague after his turn in the minefield. Li explains the details to his colleagues to remind them to be very careful. [Photo by Ye Yangping/China.org.cn]


走下雷场,摘下头盔,李江显得格外轻松,但额头上不停往下滴的汗水。[中国网图片库 叶洋萍 摄]
Li Jiang sweats heavily after completing his minefield clearance duty. He takes off his helmet, smiles and looks particularly relaxed. [Photo by Ye Yangping/China.org.cn]


排雷成果展示台,成了扫雷官兵们“忠于祖国,不辱使命”教育的生动课堂。每排除一枚炸弹,背后都有一个惊心动魄的故事。[中国网图片库 叶洋萍 摄]
This minesweeping achievement display platform has become a classroom where Chinese minesweeping peacekeepers exchange their work experience. "To be loyal to the motherland and never disgrace the mission" is their firm belief. Every task is a soul-stirring story. [Photo by Ye Yangping/China.org.cn]
 
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