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Home / Blog • Personal Protection • Security Consulting / Chinese Food Has Been With Us for Long, Now the Security is Coming
Chinese food has been with us for long, now the Security is coming
Blog, Personal Protection, Security Consulting ansneiadmin May 20, 2018

Chinese Food Has Been With Us for Long, Now the Security is Coming

In the West we had delicious Chinese food for years by now. The new breed in security also comes from China. Can you imagine ?

In 2016, evening of July 8, the streets of the South Sudanese capital of Juba were raked with gunfire as an uneasy truce between warring political factions broke down. Inside the offices of DeWe Security, a Chinese private security firm, phones started ringing. (Source, Financial Times)

Panicked Chinese oil workers employed by the China National Petroleum Corp, the main client of DeWe (pronounced “DeWei”) in South Sudan, were calling an emergency number to say they were in harm’s way and awaiting instructions. (Source, Financial Times)

For Kong Wei, head of DeWe’s Juba office and a veteran of the People’s Liberation Army who retired five years ago, it was the start of a 50 hour-marathon without sleep as he and his colleagues executed an evacuation plan. “Bullets and shells flew over our compound all day and night,” said Mr Kong to FT.

The contractors soon realised that their tin-roofed cinder-block building couldn’t stop bullets — just one of the many lessons they would learn. In all, 330 Chinese civilians, stranded at 10 locations across the city, were instructed to hunker down until the airport could reopen. Some moved into metal containers to keep bullets out. It was only on the fourth day of the fighting, once the government had blasted the rebels out of Juba, that the trapped workers were evacuated to Nairobi, the capital of Kenya. (Source, Financial Times)

Details of the operation, revealed here, point to the greater role being played by China’s fledgling private security industry. Its growth has echoes of the prominent and often controversial part played by western contractors such as Blackwater, now known as Academi, and DynCorp in Iraq and Afghanistan after the 9/11 2001 attacks (more on “Blackwater” in China here in 2018, further below). The logic is the same: contractors are convenient and deniable.

Ansnei analytics point out that Contractors and the military were in reallity very different for Westerners. For the Russians, on the other hand, are in reality presenting two sides of the same coin. Western contractors have always carried out protection assignments. Protection like Personal Protection, Perimeter Protection and would be ready to answer back with fire, in case an attack would happen. The Russians (most famous is the Wagner Group) are carrying out actual government tasks. Attacks, taking ground, taking land, territory, taking out people and other things.

Where the Chinese will land, time will tell. “The intermingling between PLA and private security contractors often staffed by ‘former PLA’ is a blurry line,” says Andrew Davenport, chief operating officer of RWR Advisory Group, risk consultancy. Though private, few doubt the groups are solidly under the control of China’s national security bureaucracy. They represent “a parallel security strategy”, as Mr Davenport puts it. Erik Prince is actively giving a helping hand to boost quality of Chineese operators, and hopes that they will be used more like the Westerners, and not to do actual attacks.

Foreign policy shift
China has been reluctant to get involved in politics abroad, part of a decades-old doctrine of “non-interference”. That caution is being tested by its rapid economic growth and the boldness of some state-owned companies, which routinely work in environments that western counterparts avoid. Chinese companies service power stations in Iraq and a telecommunications network in Syria; they mine copper in Afghanistan and pump oil in South Sudan. SIA Energy, a Beijing consultancy, estimates that 7m tonnes a year of oil produced by Chinese state companies are routinely shut in worldwide due to violence in the likes of Iraq and South Sudan.

The job of protecting China’s ever-expanding commercial interests and the more than 1m Chinese living abroad has led to shifts in the country’s traditionally cautious foreign policy. Its navy has fended off pirates in the Gulf of Aden since 2012, together with the US, Denmark, Russia, Norway and many other nations. China has also rescued civilians trapped in Yemen in 2015. Its combat troops are being deployed under UN peacekeeping mandates in countries where China has investments, such as South Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo. And in 2016 Beijing established it’s first foreign military base, in Djibouti – yes, you read it right !!

The growth in the use of Chinese security contractors is part of this trend as Beijing looks for ways to protect its assets abroad without resorting to an imperialistic foreign policy that could play badly, both at home and abroad.

“The need for security protection overseas is quite significant and the army is clearly not suitable for this job due to the potential problems it might cause for foreign relations,” says Yue Gang, a retired PLA officer.

About 3.200 Chinese employees of private security groups were based abroad last year, says Liu Xinping, deputy director of the China Overseas Security and Defense Research Centre. That compares with 2.600 Chinese troops deployed under UN mandates — China’s only foreign military deployments in conflict zones.

Yet with a few exceptions the security contractors were usually unarmed. DeWe’s Chinese staff did not carry weapons during the fighting in Juba but led teams of armed locals. This is something the Chinese companies would like to change. Erik Prince, Blackwater founder, has established a security training academy in China. For him this is a new fronteer of generating business.

Beijing is extremely cautious about the industry, partly due to the abuses of the type that have periodically plunged US occupations of Afghanistan and Iraq into crisis. In 2010, supervisors at a Chinese-owned coal mine in Zambia fired into a crowd of workers demanding higher pay, injuring 11 and triggering an anti-China backlash. Two years later, a supervisor was killed at the site during a dispute over wages.

One security company manager, who asked to remain anonymous, says all contracts they sign with Chinese state companies prohibit employees from carrying weapons. “The government doesn’t want Blackwater,” he says.

Preventing ‘diplomatic incidents’
The lessons of America’s wars over the past 15 years, when more US contractors than uniformed US military personnel have died in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan, may be instructive for Beijing.

According to a study by the Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs, 7,071 US contractors have lost their lives in Iraq, Afghanistan and Pakistan since October 2001, slightly more than the 6,860 losses of the US military. “Private security contractors allow politicians to move some of their military activities off the books in terms of oversight and political responsibility,” says John-Clark Levin, a private maritime security expert based in the US.

Like their western counterparts some Chinese contractors are given jobs that would be politically sensitive if handled by government forces. “One advantage of using private security is that it can protect governments from the risk of diplomatic incidents,” says Ben Stewart, general manager of Maritime Asset Security and Training, a UK company that provides anti-piracy guards for ships. Sea marshals working for Hua Xin Zhong An, a Beijing company, are able to use lethal force as a self-defence measure against pirates, according to their contracts, while their Chinese navy escorts can only fire warning shots unless their warship is under direct attack.

On land the Chinese government is even more cautious. Tao Dexi, a contractor with Dingtai Anyuan International Security & Defense, which has operations in Iraq, says none of the staff of the security companies with which he is familiar is allowed to carry a gun.

“Chinese security companies have always carried out security missions via local teams,” he says. “But under extreme emergencies, Chinese security staff can borrow guns from the local security staff.”

While viewed initially with distrust in some corners of Beijing, the industry has been embraced by the Chinese leadership. Following the violence in South Sudan last summer President Xi Jinping advocated “improved safety risk evaluation, monitoring and pre-warning, and the handling of emergencies” for companies in dangerous territories. He called for measures to support investment in risky countries.

Two months after his comments, the difference between stationing troops and contractors was further blurred after DeWe announced plans to build two “security camps” in South Sudan and the landlocked Central African Republic. These appear to be the first private security facilities of this type to be used by Chinese companies, heralding a more permanent security presence.

Li Xiaopeng, DeWe’s chief executive, told a Beijing forum on overseas security in October that “our next step is to mass-produce [safety camps] in countries with Chinese investments as well as [those] with instability factors”.

Government backing
Based near Beijing airport, DeWe’s compound has a converted warehouse featuring a mock-up of a Middle East town. The model’s façades are used to practise evasion tactics and hostage rescues.

Hao Gang, a former police official who is DeWe’s general manager for Beijing, says the group’s biggest revenue generator is to provide what he calls “integrated solutions” for Chinese companies going abroad, including training, on-site security and risk assessment.

The group was founded in 2011 by a number of former military and police officers who had first worked together during the 2008 Beijing Olympics. Since 2013, 86.000 Chinese civilian employees have been trained, says Mr Hao.

“It depends where they are going. If they are going to Paris, we teach them how not to have their passport stolen. If they are going to Kabul, we teach them how to evade kidnappers,” says Mr Hao.

Private security firms were only made legal in China in 2010, by legislation that allowed companies to provide armed services to domestic businesses like banks and factories. Now, DeWe has 352 Chinese employees based abroad, as well as 3.000 locally hired staff working for companies such as China Road and Bridge Corporation building the Nairobi-Mombasa railway, as well as defending CNPC in Sudan.

Chinese security companies are still finding their feet, says Frauke Renz, a researcher who specialises in the private security industry. “The big international contractors are more experienced in those environments,” she says. “If you take Iraq or Nigeria, for instance, most international companies have been operating in those countries for years”.

Yet many Chinese contractors are benefiting from government pressure to use only domestic security firms. CNPC, for example, used to employ Control Risks, a UK company, to guard fields in Iraq, but in 2010 began to employ Guanan, a Chinese company with close links to ZhenHua Oil, China’s fifth-largest oil company.

DeWe’s profile rose dramatically last summer when Chinese Poly-GCL Petroleum Group Holdings hired it to manage security at a $4bn LNG project in Ethiopia — the largest project that the Chinese private security industry has been asked to protect.

Some other companies appear to have friends in high places. HXZA, for example, has a near-monopoly on security for Cosco Holding and China Shipping Container Lines, China’s two largest state-owned shipping groups. “They clearly have very solid relations to the state, considering how loyal their customer base is. And they are not that cheap,” says one foreign private contractor. HXZA declined to be interviewed.

A handful of other companies such as Shandong Huawei, Veterans Security Services and Dingtai Anyuan, have similar profiles and recruit from the same pool of veterans, providing guard services abroad and training state company employees. Aside from the language advantage, they are cheaper than their foreign counterparts — a team of 12 Chinese guards costs about $1.000 a day, the same as one Danish, British or US guard. We think there still is a significant difference in mentality, skills and independent execution power, and therefore to consult us in relation to the task at hand, before hiring.

The legal basis for permitting Chinese companies to deploy guards abroad is still vague, admits DeWe’s Mr Hao: “We obey all local laws in the countries in which we work.”

The industry is a byproduct of China’s prodigious overseas expansion, which has been taking its companies into ever more dangerous territories, places where ground troops, both foreign and local, are either unwelcome or ineffective.

“Private contractors are sometimes the least bad option for security,” says Edward Allen of ViennEast, a risk consultancy and former security analyst in Iraq, “that is the reason they are there.”

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