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Hu Jintao (1942- ), native of Jixi, Anhui
Province.
Vice president of the People's
Republic of China; vice chairman of CPC Central Military
Commission and PRC Central Military Commission; Standing
Committee member of the Political Bureau, and member of the
Secretariat, of 15th CPC Central Committee; president of CPC
Party School.
Hu, who had aspired to be an
engineer in the field of water conservancy and hydroelectric
power generation, became the youngest member of the CPC
Central Committee in 1982, when he was 39.
At
the age of 44, he became secretary of the CPC Guizhou
Provincial Committee, again the youngest among his peers. At
the end of 1988, when turmoil erupted in Tibet, Hu was
appointed secretary of the Tibet Autonomous Regional Party
Committee. People then noticed that he was the only Party
chief in Tibet with a civilian background. his predecessors
had all come from the army.
Hu's rapid
elevation through the Party's echelons is a reflection of
the Party's long endeavour to cultivate and promote young
cadres.
He once said success in life
"requires resolve, attention to concrete matters and
courage in making decisions."
In 1982 he
served as secretary of the Gansu Provincial Committee of the
Chinese Communist Youth League. Transferred later to
Beijing, he became member of the Secretariat of the Central
Committee of the Youth League and president of the All-China
Youth Federation, and headed the Youth League Secretariat in
November 1984.
A Brilliant student of the
prestigious Qinghua University majoring in hydraulic
engineering, Hu joined the CPC in 1964. He became a
political instructor at his alma mater upon graduation in
1965. He gained experience in grassroots practical work. In
1968 he was transferred to the Ministry of Water Resources
and Electric Power and, in 1974 to Gansu Province where he
served as deputy head of the Project Design Management
Division of the Provincial Construction Commission. During
the period he took part in the construction of two
hydroelectric power stations in the upper reaches of the
Yellow River.
The technical and economic work
familiarized himself with management and that work related
to the communist youth league had also contributed to an
improvement of his abilities, and reminded himself being an
official should work for the well-being of the people in an
area where he works.
As secretary of the
Party's Guizhou Provincial Committee, Hu travelled
extensively for personal investigations, leaving his
footsteps in all the 86 counties and cities of Guizhou.
During his four-year stay in Tibet, Hu, braved the plateau
region's hostile natural conditions including a shortage of
atmospheric oxygen, visted many areas and established
extensive contacts with people from different walks of life
there, contributing effectively to unity, stability and
development in Tibet.
Long years of work in
remote and poor areas inhabited by ethnic minorities have
tempered Hu's character as well as made him a staunch
supporter of the policies of reform and door
opening.
He was elected member of Secretariat
of CPC Central Committee in Oct. 1992; became president of
CPC Party School, 1993.
Hu was alternate member
of the 12th CPC Central Committee, and was elected and
reelected member of 13th to 15th CPC Central
Committees.
Hu Jintao was elected member of the
Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the CPC
Central Committee at the First Plenary Session of the
Party's 14th Central Committee in October 1992. In 1997, he
was reelected member of Standing Committee of Political
Bureau, and member of Secretariat, of 15th CPC Central
Committee.
Hu was elected member of the
Standing Committee of the National Committee of the Chinese
People's Political Consultative Conference, and deputy
(Guizhou Provincial Delegation) to 7th, 8th, and 9th
NPC.
Hu Jintao was elected vice president of
the People's Republic of China at the first session of 9th
NPC, March 1998.
Hu was appointed vice chairman
of CPC Central Military Commission on Sept. 22,
1999.
Hu was appointed vice chairman of PRC
Central Military Commission on Oct. 31, 1999.
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