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Home > Zhao Ziyang


 

Zhao Ziyang
Birthday October 17, 1919
Birth place Huaxian , Henan
Party Communist
PRC Premier
Order6th Chinese Premier
Term of Office: June 1983 ? November 1987
Acting premier September, 1980 ? June, 1983
Predecessor: Hua Guofeng
Successor: Li PengLi Peng Date of Birth October, 1928 Place of Birth Shanghai Wife Zhu Lin Political Party Communist Acting premier November 1987- April 1998 Premier Order 7th-8th Premier Term of Office April 1988-March 1998 Predecessor Zhao Ziyang Successor Zhu Rongji Cha
CPC General SecretaryThe General Secretary of the Communist Party of China is the highest ranking official within the Communist Party of China and heads the Secretariat of the Communist Party of China. The General Secretary is the highest ranking member of the Politburo Stand
Order13th General Secretary
Term of Office: November 11November 11 is the 315th day of the year (316th in leap years) in the Gregorian Calendar, with 50 days remaining. Events 1215 The fourth lateran council meets, adopting the doctrine of transubstantiation, meaning that bread and wine are transformed into t 1987 ? June 23June 23 is the 174th day of the year (175th in leap years) in the Gregorian Calendar, with 191 days remaining. Events 1300-1899 1314 The Battle of Bannockburn south of Stirling, Edward II of England & Robert I of Scotland met in battle. Scotland won and E 19891989 is a common year starting on Sunday (click on link for calendar). Events January January 7 Akihito becomes Emperor of Japan following the death of Hirohito. The Heisei period begins January 8 the Kegworth Air Disaster A British Midland Boeing 737 cra
Acting General Secretary January 16January 16 is the 16th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar. There are 349 days remaining (350 in leap years). Events 27 BC Octavian Caesar given the title Augustus by the Roman Senate. 1362 One of the North Sea's greatest stormtides ever destroys th 1987 - November 11 1987
Predecessor: Hu Yaobang
Successor: Jiang Zemin

Zhào Zǐyáng ( Traditional Chinese: 趙紫陽, Simplified Chinese: 赵紫阳, Hanyu Pinyin: Zhào Zǐyáng, Wade-Giles: Chao Tzu-yang) (born 17 October 1919) was a politician in the People's Republic of China. He was Premier of the People's Republic of China from 1980 to 1987, and General Secretary of the Communist Party of China from 1987 to 1989.

The son of a wealthy Henan province landlord, he joined the Communist Youth League in 1932 and worked underground as a CPC official during the second Sino-Japanese War (1937-1945). He rose to prominence in the party in Guangdong from 1951. By the 1960s he was the Party secretary of Guangdong province.

As a supporter of the reforms of Liu Shaoqi, he was dismissed as Guangdong party leader during the Cultural Revolution, paraded through Guangzhou in a dunce cap, and in 1971 he was assigned to work in Inner Mongolia.

He was rehabilitated by Zhou Enlai in 1973 and sent to China's largest province, Sichuan, as first party secretary in 1975. Here he introduced radical and successful capitalist rural reforms, which led to a rapid increase in output. He was a member of the Communist Party Central Committee from 1973. Deng Xiaoping had him inducted into the Politburo as an alternate member in 1977 and as a full member in 1979. He joined the Politburo Standing Committee in 1982.

After six months as Vice-Premier, Zhao was appointed Premier in 1980 and assumed, in addition, the post of CPC General Secretary in January 1987.

Named General Secretary of the party in 1987, he persisted in advocating economic reforms and an open foreign policy. His economic reforms were criticized for causing inflation. Li Peng succeeded Zhao as Premier in 1987.

Zhao speaks during 1989 Democracy Protests with Wen Jiabao to the right.

The tragic events of the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 sealed his fate and rendered impossible any further democratic movement. When China's communist leaders Deng Xiaoping, Yang Shangkun, Li Peng, Hu Qili were finalizing their plans to declare martial law and crush the Tiananmen Square democracy protests, Zhao, then general secretary of the Chinese Communist Party, waded into the students and spoke to them and pleaded with them to abandon their vigil before it was too late.

In the power struggle that ensued, Zhao was stripped of all his positions. What motivated Zhao remains, even today, a topic of debate by many. Some say he went into the square hoping a conciliatory gesture would gain him leverage against hard-liners like Premier Li Peng. After the massacre, Zhao was placed under house arrest. He remains under tight supervision even to this day.

Zhao called political reform "the biggest test facing socialism." He believed economic progress was inextricably linked to democratization. As early as 1986, Zhao became the first high-ranking Chinese leader to call for change, by offering a choice of election candidates from the village level all the way up to membership in the Central Committee. His economic policies were, for their time and place, similarly progressive. He developed "preliminary stage theory," a course for transforming the socialist system that set the stage for much of the prosperity China enjoys today.

In the 1980s, Zhao was branded by many as a revisionist of Marxism. He advocated government transparancy and a national dialogue that included ordinary citizens in the policymaking process, which made him popular with the masses. In Sichuan, where Zhao implemented economic restructuring in the 1970s, there was a saying: "yao chi liang, Zhao Ziyang." The wordplay on his name, loosely translated, means "if you want to eat, seek Ziyang."

In February 2004, Zhao had a pneumonia attack that lead to a severe lung malfunctioning. On April 6, the state security was put on high alert to prevent any disturbances as a consequence of his death.

See also: Politics of China, History of the People's Republic of China

Preceded By:
Hua Guofeng
Premier of the PRC
( 19801987)
Succeeded By:
Li Peng

Zhao Ziyang CPC leaders Zhao

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