Li Peng
This article has an unclear citation style. (July 2019) |
Li Peng | |
---|---|
李鹏 | |
4th Premier of the People's Republic of China | |
In office 25 March 1988 – 17 March 1998 Acting: 24 November 1987 – 25 March 1988 | |
President | Yang Shangkun Jiang Zemin |
Vice Premier | Cabinet I (1988–93) Cabinet II (1993–98) |
Leader | Deng Xiaoping Jiang Zemin |
Preceded by | Zhao Ziyang |
Succeeded by | Zhu Rongji |
Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress | |
In office 15 March 1998 – 15 March 2003 | |
Leader | Jiang Zemin (Paramount leader) |
Preceded by | Qiao Shi |
Succeeded by | Wu Bangguo |
Vice Premier of the People's Republic of China | |
In office 6 June 1983 – 24 November 1987 | |
Premier | Zhao Ziyang |
Personal details | |
Born | Shanghai French Concession | 20 October 1928
Died | 22 July 2019 Beijing | (aged 90)
Nationality | Chinese |
Political party | Communist Party of China |
Spouse | Zhu Lin (m. 1958, his death 2019)[1] |
Children | Li Xiaopeng (son) Li Xiaolin (daughter) Li Xiaoyong (son) |
Parent(s) | Li Shuoxun (father) Zhao Juntao (mother)[1] |
Alma mater | Moscow Power Engineering Institute |
Profession | Politician Hydroelectric engineer |
Li Peng | |||||||||||||||||||
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Simplified Chinese | 李鹏 | ||||||||||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 李鵬 | ||||||||||||||||||
Literal meaning | Li (surname 李) Peng (giant bird in Chinese mythology) | ||||||||||||||||||
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Li Peng (Chinese: 李鹏; pinyin: Lǐ Péng; 20 October 1928 – 22 July 2019) was a Chinese politician. Known as the "Butcher of Beijing" for his role in the Tiananmen Square Massacre,[2][3] Li served as the fourth Premier of the People's Republic of China from 1987 to 1998, and as the Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress, China's top legislative body, from 1998 to 2003. For much of the 1990s Li was ranked second in the Communist Party of China (CPC) hierarchy behind then Party General Secretary Jiang Zemin. He retained his seat on the CPC Politburo Standing Committee until his retirement in 2002.
Li was the son of an early Communist revolutionary, Li Shuoxun, who was executed by the Kuomintang. After meeting Zhou Enlai in Sichuan, Li was raised by Zhou and his wife, Deng Yingchao. Li trained to be an engineer in the USSR and worked at an important national power company after returning to China. He escaped the political turmoil of the 1950s, '60s and '70s due to his political connections and his employment in the company. After Deng Xiaoping became China's leader in the late 1970s, Li took a number of increasingly important and powerful political positions, eventually becoming premier in 1987.
As Premier, Li was the most visible representative of China's government who backed the use of force to quell the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989. During the protests Li used his authority as premier to declare martial law and, in cooperation with Deng Xiaoping, who was the Chairman of the Central Military Commission, ordered the June 1989 military crackdown against student pro-democracy demonstrators in Tiananmen Square. Li advocated a largely conservative approach to Chinese economic reform, which placed him at odds with General Secretary Zhao Ziyang, who fell out of favour in 1989. After Zhao was removed from office Li promoted a conservative socialist economic agenda, but lost influence to incoming vice-premier Zhu Rongji and was unable to prevent the increasing free-market liberalization of the Chinese economy. During his time in office he helmed the controversial Three Gorges Dam project. He and his family managed a large Chinese power monopoly, which the Chinese government broke up after his term as premier expired. Li died at the age of 90 in Beijing.
Childhood
Li was born as Li Yuanpeng (李遠芃; Lǐ Yuǎnpéng) in Shanghai French Concession, with ancestral roots in Chengdu, Sichuan province.[4] He was the son of Li Shuoxun, one of the earliest CPC revolutionaries,[5] who was the political commissar of the Twentieth Division during the Nanchang Uprising, and Zhao Juntao, also an early Communist operative.[6] In 1931, Li's father, then working undercover in Hainan, was captured and executed by the Kuomintang.[7] Li was believed to have met Deng Yingchao, wife of senior Communist leader Zhou Enlai, in Chengdu in 1939, who then took him to Changchun to meet Zhou. Zhou was in the Communist base of Yan'an, and they did not meet until late 1940.[8] In 1941, when Li was twelve, Zhou sent Li to Yan'an, where Li studied until 1945.[6] As a seventeen-year-old, in 1945, Li joined the Communist Party of China.[9]
Early career
In 1941, Li Peng began studying at the Yan'an Institute of Natural Science (a predecessor of the Beijing Institute of Technology).[10] In July 1946, Li was sent to work in Zhangjiakou. According to his own recollection, in 1947, he journeyed through Shandong and North Korea, eventually ending up in Harbin where he began managing some work for a lard processing plant. In 1948, Li Peng was sent to study at the Moscow Power Engineering Institute, majoring in hydroelectric engineering. A year later, in 1949, Zhou Enlai became Premier of the newly declared People's Republic of China.[6] Li graduated in 1954. During his time in the Soviet Union, Li was the head of the Chinese Students Association in the Soviet Union.[9]
When Li returned to China in 1955, the country was firmly under the control of the Communist Party. Li took part in technical then management work in the power industry, beginning his career in Northeast China. At the outset of the Cultural Revolution, Li was sent to Beijing to head up the municipal power bureau.[9] He played a leading role in the construction of the Tuhe Powerplant in Tangshan and the Gaojing Powerplant in Beijing.[11] During his time at Gaojing, he worked three days and three nights supervising the construction of the site. On 4 October 1974, he was struck by a vehicle while riding his bicycle home from work.[11][5] In 1976, Li was dispatched to affected regions of the Tangshan earthquake as head of the power restoration efforts.[11]
Li advanced politically after the ascent of Deng Xiaoping, and served as the Vice-Minister and Minister of Power between 1979 and 1983. In 1982–1983 Li served as the vice-minister of Water Conservancy and Power.[9] Much of Li's rapid political promotion was due to the support of Party elder Chen Yun.[12]
Li joined the Central Committee at the Twelfth National Congress in 1982. In 1985 he was named minister of the State Education Commission, and was elected to the Politburo and the Party Secretariat. In 1987 Li became a member of the powerful Standing Committee.[5]
Premiership
Defender of state control
This section needs additional citations for verification. (July 2019) |
In November 1987, after Premier Zhao Ziyang was promoted to General Secretary, Li became acting Premier. He was formally elected Premier in March 1988. Within a year of this promotion, Li would play a major role in ending Zhao's career, after Zhao publicly supported demonstrators in Tiananmen Square. At the time of his promotion, Li seemed like an unusual choice for Premier because he did not seem to share Deng's enthusiasm for introducing market reforms.[5] Li was raised to the position of Premier thanks partially to the departure of Hu Yaobang, who was forced to resign as General Secretary after the Party blamed him for a series of student-led protests in 1987.
Throughout the 1980s, political dissent and social problems, including inflation, urban migration, and school overcrowding, became great problems in China. Despite these acute challenges, Li shifted his focus away from the day-to-day concerns of energy, communications, and raw materials allocation, and took a more active role in the ongoing intra-party debate on the pace of market reforms. Politically, Li opposed the modern economic reforms pioneered by Zhao Ziyang throughout Zhao's years of public service. While students and intellectuals urged greater reforms, some party elders increasingly feared that the instability opened up by any significant reforms would threaten to undermine the authority of the Communist Party, which Li had spent his career attempting to strengthen.
After Zhao became General Secretary of the Communist Party of China, his proposals in May 1988 to expand free enterprise led to popular complaints (which some suggest were politically inspired) about inflation fears. Public fears about the negative effects of market reforms gave conservatives (including Li Peng) the opening to call for greater centralization of economic controls and stricter prohibitions against Western influences, especially opposing further expansion of Zhao's more free enterprise-oriented approach. This precipitated a political debate, which grew more heated through the winter of 1988–1989.
Tiananmen Square
The Tiananmen Square protests of 1989 began with the mass mourning over the death of former General secretary Hu Yaobang, widely perceived to have been purged for his support of political liberalization.[13] On the eve of Hu's funeral, 100,000 people gathered at Tiananmen Square.[14] Beijing students began the demonstrations to encourage continued economic reform and liberalization, and these demonstrations soon evolved into a mass movement for political reform.[15] From Tiananmen Square, the protesters later expanded into the surrounding streets. Non-violent protests also occurred in cities throughout China, including Shanghai and Wuhan. Rioting occurred in Xi'an and Changsha.[16][17]
The Tiananmen protests were partially protests against the affluence of the children of high-ranking Communist Party officials, and the perception that second-generation officials had received their fortunes through exploiting their parents' influence. Li, whose family has often been at the center of corruption allegations within the Chinese power industry, was vulnerable to these charges.[18]
An editorial published in the People's Daily on 26 April and bearing the name of Deng Xiaoping, denounced the demonstrations as "premeditated and organized turmoil with anti-Party and anti-socialist motives". This article had the effect of worsening the demonstrations by angering its leaders, who then made their demands more extreme. Zhao Ziyang later wrote in his autobiography that, although Deng had stated many of these sentiments in a private conversation with Li Peng shortly before the editorial was written, Li had these comments disseminated to Party members and published as the editorial without Deng's knowledge or consent.[19]
Li strictly refused to negotiate with the Tiananmen protesters out of principle, and became one of the officials most objected to by protesters.[12] One of the protest's key leaders, Wu'erkaixi, during a hunger strike, publicly scolded Li on National Television, saying he was ignoring the needs of the people. Some observers say that Wang's statements insulted Li personally, hardening his resolve to end the protest by violent means.[20][citation needed]
Among the other senior members of the central government, Li became the one who most strongly favored violence and known as the "Butcher of Beijing" for his role in the crackdown.[2][3] After winning the support of most of his colleagues, apparently including Deng Xiaoping, Li officially declared martial law in Beijing on 20 May 1989 and the protests were crushed by the military on 3–4 June. Most estimates of the dead range from several hundred to several thousand people. Li later described the crackdown as a historic victory for Communism,[5] and wrote that he feared the protests would be as potentially damaging to China as the Cultural Revolution (1966–1976) had been.[20]
Political longevity
Although the Tiananmen crackdown was an "international public relations disaster for China", it ensured that Li would have a long and productive career. He remained powerful, even though he had been one of the main targets of protesters, partially because the leadership believed that limiting Li's career would be the same as admitting that they had made mistakes by suppressing the 1989 protests. By keeping Li at the upper levels of the Party, China's leaders communicated to the world that the country remained stable and united.[5]
In the immediate aftermath of the Tiananmen protests, Li took a leading role in a national austerity program, intended to slow economic growth and inflation and re-centralize the economy. Li worked to increase taxes on agriculture and export-industries, and increased salaries to less-efficient industries owned by the government.[21] Li directed a tight monetary policy, implementing price controls on many commodities, supporting higher interest rates, and cutting off state loans to private and cooperative sectors in attempts to reduce inflation.
Li suffered a heart attack in 1993, and began to lose influence within the Party to vice-premier Zhu Rongji, a strong advocate for economic liberalization. In that year, when Li made his annual work report to the Politburo, he was forced to make over seventy changes in order to make the plans acceptable to Deng.[12] Perhaps realizing that opposition to the market reforms would be poorly received by Deng and other Party elders, Li publicly supported Deng's economic reforms. Li was reappointed Premier in 1993, despite a large protest vote for Zhu. Zhu Rongji eventually succeeded Li when Li's second term expired, in 1998.[5]
Li began two megaprojects when he was the Premier. He initiated the construction of the Three Gorges Dam on 14 December 1994, and later began preparations for the Shenzhou Manned Space Program. Both programs were subject to much controversy within China and abroad. The Shenzhou program was especially criticized due to its extraordinary cost (tens of billions of dollars). Many economists and humanitarians suggested that those billions in capital might be better invested in helping the Chinese population deal with economic hardships and improvement in the China's education, health services, and legal system.[22][23]
Chairmanship of the National People's Congress
Li remained premier until 1998, when he was constitutionally limited to two terms. After his second term expired, he became the chairman of the National People's Congress. Support for Li for the largely ceremonial position was low, as he only received less than 90% of the vote at the 1998 National People's Congress, where he was the only candidate.[24] He spent much of his time monitoring what he considered his life's work to have been, the Three Gorges Dam. Li's interest in the Dam reflected his earlier career as a hydraulic engineer, and he spent much of his career while in office presiding over a vast and growing power industry. At this time Li Peng considered himself to be a builder and a modernizer.
Legacy and death
After retiring, Li retained some influence in the Politburo Standing Committee. Luo Gan, who presided over law enforcement and national security between 2002 and 2007, was considered Li's protégé.[25] Following the 17th Party Congress, Li's influence waned considerably. He was subject to frequent speculation over corruption issues that plague him and his family. In addition, perhaps more than any other leader, Li's public image had become inextricably associated with memory of the 1989 Tiananmen crackdown, and as a result he continued to be a widely despised figure among a substantial segment of the Chinese population well into the 21st century.[18] He was generally unpopular in China, where he (had) "has long been a figure of scorn and suspicion".[5]
Li spent much of the 1990s expanding and managing an energy monopoly, State Power Corporation of China. Because the company was staffed by Li's relatives, Li was accused of turning China's energy industry into a "family fiefdom".[26][27] At its height, Li's power company controlled 72% of all energy-producing assets in China, and was ranked as the sixtieth-largest company in the world by Fortune magazine. After Li's departure from government, Li's energy monopoly was split into five smaller companies by the Chinese government.[28]
In 2010, Li's autobiographical work, The Critical Moment – Li Peng Diaries, was published by New Century Press. The Critical Moment covered Li's activities during the period of the Tiananmen Square protests, and was published on the protests' twenty-first anniversary. The Critical Moment was characterized by reviewers as largely an attempt to minimize Li's culpability during the most egregious stages of the crackdown; some also say he attempted to shift blame to Deng.[20] He reappeared at the 19th Party Congress on 18 October 2017.[29]
Li died on 22 July 2019 at the age of 90. He had been receiving medical treatment in a hospital in Beijing at the time of his death.[30][31][32][33] His funeral was held on 29 July 2019.[34]
Family
Li Peng was married to Zhu Lin (朱琳), a deputy manager in "a large firm in the south of China".[12] Li and Zhu had 3 children:[35] Li's elder son, Li Xiaopeng; Li's daughter, Li Xiaolin; and, Li's younger son, Li Xiaoyong. Li Xiaoyong is married to Ye Xiaoyan, the daughter of Communist veteran Ye Ting's second son, Ye Zhengming.
Li's family benefited from Li's high position during the 1980s and 1990s. Two of Li's children, Li Xiaopeng and Li Xiaolin, inherited and ran two of China's electrical monopolies. State-run Chinese media have publicly questioned whether it is in China's long-term interest to preserve the "new class of monopoly state capitalists" that Li's family represents.[36] Li Xiaopeng entered politics in Shanxi province and became its governor in 2012 and then in 2016, he became Minister of Transport. Li Xiaolin served as chief executive of China Power International Development, before being transferred out in 2016 to a minor executive post at a different power company.[37]
See also
- Politics of the People's Republic of China
- History of the People's Republic of China (1989-2002)
- Premier of the PRC
References
Citations
- ^ a b [1]
- ^ a b "HONG KONG POLITICS & PROTEST 'Butcher of Beijing': Ex-Chinese premier Li Peng, who ordered Tiananmen Massacre, dies aged 91". Hong Kong Free Press. AFP. 23 July 2019. Retrieved 23 July 2019.
- ^ a b "Li Peng: former Chinese premier known as 'Butcher of Beijing' dies aged 90". Guardian. 23 July 2019. Retrieved 23 July 2019.
- ^ Xinhuanet
- ^ a b c d e f g h CNN.com
- ^ a b c Barnouin and Yu 126
- ^ Fang and Fang 66
- ^ Li
- ^ a b c d Mackerras, McMillen, and Watson 136
- ^ Bartke 235
- ^ a b c 六四强硬派李鹏逝世 三大争议亟待盖棺论定. Duowei. 22 July 2019.
- ^ a b c d Mackerras, McMillen, and Watson 137
- ^ Pan 274
- ^ Keesing's Record of World Events 36,587
- ^ Nathan
- ^ Becker 8
- ^ "China's Upheaval: Five Weeks of Student Demonstrations". New York Times. Associated Press. 20 May 1989. Retrieved 23 July 2019.
- ^ a b Bezlova "The Princeling and the Protesters"
- ^ Zhao 10–12
- ^ a b c Asia News.it
- ^ Pickunas
- ^ Wu
- ^ Lan
- ^ BBC News "China's parliament embarrasses Li Peng"
- ^ Europa World Yearbook 1109
- ^ Rosenthal, Elisabeth (11 March 2003). "Li Peng Retires, but His Infamy for Tiananmen Massacre Endures". The New York Times.
In recent years, he has also been accused of corruption and nepotism, particularly concerning the involvement of his wife and sons in state-owned power companies.
- ^ "Tale of Chinese Scandal Backfires on Magazine". Los Angeles Times. 18 January 2002.
- ^ Antoaneta Bezlova, “China corruption probes signal power plays" Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, Asia Times Online. (1 November 2002)
- ^ 李鹏亮相十九大 媒体:并非外界所传病危. Duowei News. 18 October 2017. Retrieved 3 February 2020.
- ^ 李鹏同志逝世-新华网. Xinhua. Retrieved 23 July 2019.
- ^ "Former Chinese premier Li Peng dies aged 90". South China Morning Post. 23 July 2019. Retrieved 23 July 2019.
- ^ "China's former premier Li Peng dies at 90". Reuters. 23 July 2019. Retrieved 23 July 2019.
- ^ Li Peng, hardline Chinese premier who backed Tiananmen massacre, dies - CNN(24 July 2019)
- ^ 【李鹏逝世】中共七常委出席李鹏告别式 江泽民现身[图]. Duowei News. 29 July 2019. Retrieved 3 February 2020.
- ^ Asiaweek.com
- ^ Lam 1
- ^ Xinhua
Bibliography
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- "32: Li Peng" Asiaweek.com. 1999. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
- Barnouin, Barbara and Yu Changgen. (2006). Zhou Enlai: A Political Life. Hong Kong: Chinese University of Hong Kong. ISBN 962-996-280-2. Retrieved 12 March 2011.
- Bartke, Wolfgang. (1987). Who's Who in the People's Republic of China. K.G. Saur. ISBN 978-3-598-10610-1
- "China's Parliament Embarrasses Li Peng".BBC News. 15 March 1998. Retrieved 10 September 2011.
- Becker, Jasper. "Protests Spread in China". Tn The Manchester Guardian Weekly. 30 April 1989.
- Bezlova, Antoaneta. "China Corruption Probes Signal Power Plays". Asia Times Online. 1 November 2002. Retrieved 19 August 2011.
- Bezlova, Antoneta. "The Princeling and the Protesters". Asia Times Online. 19 January 2002. Retrieved 19 August 2011.
- Bristow, Michael. "Tiananmen Leader's 'Diary' Revealed". BBC News. 4 June 2010. Retrieved 21 August 2011.
- "'Downsizing' the Chinese State: Government Retrenchment in the 1990s". The China Quarterly. Issue 175. Cambridge University Press. 2003.
- "The Man Who Took on the Dissidents: Li Peng (1928–)" CNN.com. 2001. Retrieved 21 August 2008.
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- Fang, Percy Jucheng, and Fang, Lucy Guinong. (1986). Zhou Enlai: A Profile. Foreign Languages Press.
- Keesing's Record of World Events. Volume 35. 1989.
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- Lan, Chen. "Pre-Shenzhou Studies". Shenzhou History. 2004. Retrieved 21 August 2011.
- Li Jing. "Li Peng Finally Denies Old Rumours He Is Ex-Premier Zhou Enlai's Adopted Son". South China Morning Post. 1 July 2014. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
- Mackerras, Colin, Donald Hugh McMillen, and Donal Andrew Watson. Dictionary of the Politics of the People's Republic of China. Great Britain: Routelage. 1998. Retrieved 4 November 2011.
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- Pikcunas, Dr. Diane D. "Chinas Great Leap Backward". Freeman: Ideas on Liberty. December 1989. Vol 39; issue 12. Retrieved 4 November 2011.
- Wang Yongxia. "Li Xiaopeng Takes the Post of Vice-Governor of Shanxi, Promises to be "a Good Public Servant". Xinhuanet. 13 June 2008. Retrieved 27 October 2011. [Chinese]
- Wu, Jeff. "Three Gorges Dam"[permanent dead link ]. The Claremont Port Side. 28 November 2007.
- Xinhua. "Li Xiaopeng Appointed Acting Governor of Shanxi". China Daily. 19 December 2012. Retrieved 18 July 2014.
- "Li Peng's Biography". Xinhuanet. 15 January 2002. Retrieved 21 December 2010.
- Zhao Ziyang. Prisoner of the State: The Secret Journal of Premier Zhao Ziyang. Trans & Ed. Bao Pu, Renee Chiang, and Adi Ignatius. New York: Simon and Schuster. 2009. ISBN 1-4391-4938-0
External links
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