Under the law adopted by China's National People's Congress (NPC) on July 3, the military can get involved in international military security cooperation, including UN peacekeeping operations, relief and rescue and other missions to protect China's overseas interests.
Chinese military is already taking part in UN peacekeeping missions including the anti-piracy operations in Gulf of Aden.
Analysts say while it has no overseas military bases, the new law for the first time provides legal cover for its deployment abroad to protect Chinese interests.
This is the first time that such provisions have been included in Chinese law, an unidentified official with the legislative affairs bureau of the Central Military Commission said in an interview with the PLA Daily, the official mouthpiece of the Chinese military.
"The clause is not only based on our military operations, but also serves as legal ground for troops involvement in overseas missions," the official said.
"It gives a legal grounding for the army to effectively deal with multiple security threats and fulfil diversified military tasks," the official added.
The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein had recently expressed deep concerns about the human rights implications regarding the scope of a new law on national security specially in terms of rights of Chinese citizens.
