BEIJING, Nov. 12 (Xinhua) - China on Friday night saw off its first police squad for South Sudan who will join in the United Countries peacekeeping missions in the African nation, the Service of Open Security said in an announcement Saturday. The 14-part squad, made out of cops from southwestern region of Chongqing, withdrew from Beijing at 11 p.m. Friday, the announcement said. The squad incorporates staff from the bureaus of flight and passage, flame battling, criminal examination, open security, preparing and also activity and watch. Parts of the police squad have gotten an instructional class on worldwide law and emergency treatment, in addition to everything else, and are outfitted with the imperative information and abilities for peacekeeping. As per the service, China has sent more than 1,700 police for UN peacekeeping missions to Timor Leste, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, Liberia, Afghanistan, Haiti and Sudan since January 2000. South Sudan proclaimed autonomy on July 9 in the not so distant future, and China remembered its status as an autonomous nation on that day.