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Hu Haifeng

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Hu Haifeng
2019
Deputy Minister of Ministry of Civil Affairs
Assumed office
16 January 2024
Serving with Li Baojun
CCP Committee Secretary of Lishui
In office
2 July 2018 – 27 December 2023
Serving with Wu Shunze
Personal details
Born (1972-11-06) 6 November 1972 (age 52)
Political partyCCP
Parent
ResidenceBeijing
Alma materTsinghua University (MS, LLM, EMBA, PhD)

Hu Haifeng (Chinese: 胡海峰; pinyin: Hú Hǎifēng; born November 1972) is a Chinese politician and son of Hu Jintao, former General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party, President of the People's Republic of China, Chairman of the Central Military Commission, Paramount leader of China (fourth generation of Chinese leadership). He is currently the Deputy Minister of Ministry of Civil Affairs.

Life and career

Hu graduated with a degree in Computer Science from Beijing Jiaotong University and EMBA from Tsinghua University School of Economics and Management .[1]

Hu Haifeng was the chairman of Nuctech, a Tsinghua University-owned company created in the late 1990s to make large scanners for shipping, trucking containers and railway cars, as well as luggage scanners and metal detectors for airports. After Hu became chairman of the company, it was granted a near-monopoly by the central authorities on the lucrative market for selling security equipment to airports in China. In 2009, the company had roughly 90% of the domestic market. Chinese investment in airport security has risen sharply after the September 11 attacks. In 2008, Hu Haifeng was promoted to Communist Party secretary of Tsinghua Holdings, which controls Nuctech and more than 20 other companies.[2]

Corruption

In July 2009, the Namibian government charged Nuctech with corruption. The company has been the focus for repeated allegations of unfair competition in the European Union, and also for corruption and abuse of office in the Philippines. In South Africa, investigations of corruption are underway regarding a contract obtained by the company for the sale of scanners amounting to 380 million Rand (US$54 million).[3]

Sources

References

  1. ^ "Red Nobility: Hu Haifeng|Politics|People|WantChinaTimes.com". Archived from the original on November 20, 2012. Retrieved November 8, 2012.
  2. ^ Taipeitimes.com. "Taipeitimes.com." China Internet blackout linked to leader’s son. Retrieved on July 27, 2009.
  3. ^ AsiaNews.it: Investigation into NucTech corruption expands, the company formerly headed by Hu Haifeng [1]