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Jiang Zemin:
President of PR China |
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Jiang Zemin was re-elected General
Secretary of the Communist Party of China (CPC) at the
First Plenary Session of the15th CPC Central Committee
following the last CPC National Congressin this century.
His re-election as head of the world's largest ruling
party with 58 million members is viewed as the measure
of the confidence of the Chinese people he enjoys.
Over the past eight years when Jiang served as the
top leader of the Party, China has been in a period
featuring "most stable political situation, the
strongest national strength, the most active diplomatic
activities and the most remarkable improvement in the
people's life," said a local analyst.
Overseas press commented that the prestige of CPC's
third generation leadership is just the kind of prestige
that could be expected from a country where economy
has registered double-digits growth for more than a
decade.
Jiang officially took over the post of Party General
Secretary in June, 1989 when China faced great difficulties,
politically,economically and diplomatically.
In just two years, Jiang succeeded in bringing about
big changes in the situation. The GNP grew steadily
at an averageannual rate of 12.1 percent, the fastest
in the world.
Jiang was elected President of the People's Republic
of China in March 1993 and continued to serve for another
term as Chairman of the Central Military Commission.
His status as the core of the leadership is attributable
to his outstanding achievements, ability and a steady
and down-to-earth style of work.
Born on August 17, 1926, of an intellectual family
in Yangzhou, a culturally famous city in east China's
Jiangsu Province, Jiang received his higher education
in the prestigious Shanghai Jiaotong University and
his major was electrical engineering.
Both his grandfather and father were noted local scholars.
During his college years, Jiang participated in the
CPC-led students movements and joined the Communist
Party of China in 1946.
After the founding of New China, Jiang served as associate
engineer, deputy director of a factory, section head
of an enterprise. In 1955, He went to the then Soviet
Union and worked in the Stalin Automobile Works as a
trainee for one year. After his return home, he served
as deputy division head, deputy chief power engineer,
director of a branch factory, and deputy director, director
of factories and research institutes in Changchun, Shanghai
and Wuhan.
In the ensuing years, Jiang served as deputy, then
director of foreign affairs department of the No. 1
Ministry of Machine-Building Industry. He speaks good
English, Russian and Romanian, and knows some Japanese
and French.
Before he became Shanghai Mayor in 1985, Jiang served
as minister of Electronics Industry.
His unique career experiences have enabled him to observe
and solve problems from the perspectives of profound
relations between China and the world.
Jiang was the first planner of Shenzhen, China'sfirst
special economic zone (SEZ). In 1979 when the late Chinese
leaderDeng Xiaoping proposed to build SEZs in China,
Jiang was the first to settle concrete matters in Shenzhen
on behalf of the central government. He was then serving
as deputy director and concurrently secretary general
of the State Import and Export Administration and the
State Foreign Investment Administration. Facing the
wilderness, Jiang put forward his guiding ideas that
had a far-reaching effect on Shenzhen's construction
in the following years. "All construction projects
in the SEZ should be started from a long-term point
of view and in line with international standards."
The development of Shenzhen over the past 10 years and
more has testified to the correctness of his ideas.
Soon after Jiang became Shanghai mayor in 1985, he
planned a series of key infrastructure projects using
overseas capitals.The city raised 3.2 billion US dollars
from international capital market, of which 1.4 billion
dollars were poured into such key projects as the city's
subway, Nanpu Bridge, polluted water treatment, airport
expansion and program-controlled telephone exchanges.
People are stunned by the profound changes that have
taken place in Shanghai.
Jiang was elected member of the 12th CPC Central Committee
in September of 1982. In November, 1987, Jiang was elected
member of the Political Bureau at the First Plenary
Session of the 13th CPC CentralCommittee. He was elected
member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau
in June of 1989 at the Fourth Plenary Session of the
13th Central Committee, general secretary of the CPC
Central Committee. Five months later, he was elected
chairman of the CPC Central Military Commission at the
Fifth Plenary Session of the 13th Central Committee.
At the Third Session of the Seventh National People's
Congress, he was elected chairman of the Central Military
Commission of the People's Republic of China (PRC).
At the first Plenary Session of the 14th Central Committee,
he was re-elected member of its Central Committee, member
of the Political Bureau, memberof its Standing Committee,
general secretary of CPC's Central Committee and at
the Eighth National People's Congress held in March,
1993, he was elected president of the PRC and chairman
of the Central Military Commission.
During the past eight years, what he always puts high
on his agenda is grain, cotton, edible oil and vegetable
production and supply, all closely related to the people's
daily life. "Any reform should benefit the majority
of the people and it should be carried out within the
capacity of the people to bear upon," he often
said. Thanks to the implementation of these principles,
the thorny reforms of the country's public finance,
taxation, monetary and investment systems have been
going on smoothly without sharp fluctuations.
Over the past eight years, Jiang toured almost all
provinces, autonomous regions and municipalities except
Taiwan. Whathe is concerned with most is the life of
the people in poor and remoteareas where ethnic groups
live. He initiated the ambitious anti-poverty campaign
in 1992, vowing to eradicate poverty before the end
of the century.Thanks to the intensified efforts, China's
population under the poverty line has been reduced from
80 million to 58 million by 1996.
Jiang loves to make friends with intellectuals. He
has many good friends in economic, scientific, art and
press circles. Some friends called him a "scholar
statesman." Early in 1987 when he was still Shanghai
mayor, he initialed a bi-monthly seminar with scholars
in the theoretical circle in Shanghai. Each time he
would raise a hot or sensitive or difficult issue for
the experts and scholars he invited to discuss.
Jiang stresses national self-esteem, self-confidence,national
dignity and the cohesion of the Chinese nation. Jiang
is highly accomplished in classic Chinese literature
and often quotes ancient poems off-hand. Jiang has a
wide range of interest and plays piano and erhu, a two-string
traditional Chinese musical instrument. In his spare
time, he may indulge himself in the music of Mozart
and Beethoven. In his eyes, the Chinese and Western
cultures are "communicable."
Jiang loves reading and devotes most of his spare time
to reading the latest science books. He also loves to
read Mark Twain. Sources close to him said Jiang could
recite the monologue of "To be or not to be"
in Hamlet and "Ode to the West Wind" by Shelley.
In his last official tour of Russia, his analysis of
the literary masterpieces by Leo Tolstoy and other Russian
authors surprised the Russian guides.
Wang Yeping, his wife, graduated from the Shanghai
Foreign Languages Institute and used to be head of an
electrical engineering research institute in Shanghai.
Now she has retired. The couple have two sons. Jiang
Mianheng, the eldest, obtained his doctor's degree in
electronic engineering in the United States. After returning
to Shanghai, he has been appointed director of the Shanghai
Metallurgical Research Institute. Their younger son,
Jiang Miankang, studied in Germany for a while after
finishing Shanghai No. 2 University of Engineering.
Now he is a researcher of software at the Shanghai Underground
Pipeline Information System.
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