- Chen Xitong
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Chen Xitong Traditional Chinese 陳希同 Simplified Chinese 陈希同 Transcriptions Mandarin - Hanyu Pinyin Chén Xītóng Chen Xitong (born June 1930) was a member of the Politburo of the Communist Party of China and the Mayor of Beijing until he was removed from office on charges of corruption in 1995.
Biography
Born on June 10, 1930 in Sichuan Province, China. He was known to be a diligent student and was raised by his widowed mother. Due to stringent family economic conditions, he applied for Beijing Normal University due to low tuition fees. However, with outstanding academic achievement, he was accepted by Beijing University with scholarship. He eventually married the daughter of his college professor and has two sons with her. Chen Xiaoxi and Chen Xiaotong.
A graduate of Peking University, he shared close ties to Deng Xiaoping and his family. Chen was once considered a possible successor to Deng Xiaoping. During the 1980s, Chen Xitong became a fan of American TV series Hunter when it was first aired in China, and in his speeches, Chen had made various references to the TV series.
Chen Xitong was the mayor of Beijing during the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. Being the Mayor of Beijing during that time and due to many years of Communist background, he followed the direction of China's paramount leader, Deng Xiaoping, and was used as a scape goat to be responsible for the declaration of martial law in Beijing which led to the latter scene.
A onetime rival to Jiang Zemin, Chen, being the leader of "Beijing clique", over-powered Jiang's newly-obtained authority at the time. Thereforth, led to Chen's downfall in 1995 during an anti-corruption campaign led by Jiang's Shanghai clique. Clique members Zeng Qinghong and Jia Qinglin played key roles in the campaign that eventually led to Chen's arrest; some observers view Chen's downfall as a political struggle between Chen and Jiang. It was later revealed that Chen's embezzlement was a relatively low amount in comparison to other corrupted cadres who embezzled much more but were left unscathed in the so-called anti-corruption campaigns.
Chen's Vice Mayor, Wang Baosen, committed suicide during 1994 due to reasons yet to be clairified. However, such incident became the leading fuse of this "Beijing clique" and "Shanghai clique" power struggle. It was later verified internally that the amount of money Chen embezzled was directed to build vacational recreation centers which catered to most top-tier politicians in Beijing at the time. He was also accused of having extramarital affair with lover, He Ping, of 15 years; which, was considered a violation of moral code for being member of communist party. In 1998, Chen Xitong was given a 16 year jail sentence on charges of corruption and dereliction of duty. His son, Chen Xiaotong, was also sentenced. Chen was released early from jail in 2006, officially due to reasons of ill health.
The novel The Wrath of Heaven — the Anti-Corruption Bureau in Action (天怒—反貪局在行動; pinyin: Tiān nú—Fǎntãnjú zài Xíngdòng)[1] published in 1996 by the Yuanfang Publishing House of Inner Mongolia and quickly banned in China is a fictionalized account of the Chen Xitong case written from the point of a view of an investigator.
References
- ^ "The Wrath of God -- the Anti-Corruption Bureau in Action" (Tiannu Fantanju Zai Xingdong), by Fang Wen [pseudonym]. Hohhot, December 1996, Yuanfang Chubanshe. Printed January 1997 press run of 5000 copies. ISBN 7-80595-271-X/1 120. Many pirate copies were printed.
External links
- Free searchable biography of Chen Xitong @ China Vitae
- The corrupt comrade (BBC News)
- "Wrath of Heaven" passage from the Digital Freedom Network website
Political offices Preceded by
Jiao RuoyuMayor of Beijing
1983 – 1993Succeeded by
Li QiyanPreceded by
Li XimingSecretary of the CPC Beijing Committee
1992 – 1995Succeeded by
Wei JianxingTiananmen Square protests of 1989 Communist Party of China · Chinese democracy movement Internal conditions Communist Party leaders Bao Tong · Chen Xitong · Chen Yun · Deng Xiaoping · Hu Jintao · Hu Qili · Hu Yaobang · Jiang Zemin · Li Peng · Li Xiannian · Li Ximing · Qiao Shi · Wan Li · Wang Zhen · Wen Jiabao · Wu Xueqian · Yang Shangkun · Yao Yilin · Zhao Ziyang · Zhu RongjiDissidents and student leaders Bei Dao · Chai Ling · Cui Jian · Dai Qing · Ding Zilin · Fang Lizhi · Han Dongfang · Hou Dejian · Li Lu · Liu Xianbin · Liu Xiaobo · Shen Tong · Tang Baiqiao · Wang Bingzhang · Wang Dan · Wang Youcai · Wu'erkaixi · Xiong Yan · Yan Jiaqi · Yu Dongyue · Zhang Boli · Zhao Changqing · Zhou YongjunInspiration and icons Works Almost a Revolution · Collection of June Fourth Poems · The Critical Moment · Execution · The Gate of Heavenly Peace · Prisoner of the State · Quelling the People · Sunrise Over Tiananmen Square · Tiananmen Papers · Hong Kong Goddess of Democracy · Pillar of ShameDemocracy and Human Rights groups Anniversaries 1st anniversary · 5th anniversary · 10th anniversary · 20th anniversary · 21st anniversary · 22nd anniversaryCategories:- 1930 births
- Living people
- Corruption in China
- Leaders of the Communist Party of China
- Mayors of Beijing
- Peking University alumni
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