Yin Hong
Yin Hong | |
---|---|
尹弘 | |
Communist Party Secretary of Jiangxi | |
Assumed office 7 December 2022 | |
Deputy | Ye Jianchun (Governor) |
Preceded by | Yi Lianhong |
Communist Party Secretary of Gansu | |
In office 31 March 2021 – 7 December 2022 | |
Deputy | Ren Zhenhe (Governor) |
Preceded by | Lin Duo |
Succeeded by | Hu Changsheng |
Governor of Henan | |
In office 6 December 2019 – 31 March 2021 | |
Preceded by | Chen Run'er |
Succeeded by | Wang Kai |
Personal details | |
Born | June 1963 (age 61) Huzhou, Zhejiang, China |
Political party | Chinese Communist Party |
Alma mater | Shanghai University of Technology |
Yin Hong (Chinese: 尹弘; born June 1963) is a Chinese politician who is the current Communist Party secretary of Jiangxi. He served as the governor of Henan from December 2019 to March 2021. Previously he had spent his entire political career in Shanghai.
Biography
Yin was born in Huzhou. He graduated from the Shanghai University of Technology with a double major in engineering and law. He started to work in the university's Communist Youth League organization in July 1985 after graduation. In 1988, he obtained a master's degree in law from Shanghai Jiao Tong University. In 1993, he was Southern Illinois University for one year as a visiting scholar. In 1994 after coming back from the United States, he became the general secretary of the Communist Youth League organization of the newly established Shanghai University.
He was then transferred to the Shanghai planning commission to work as the vice director in December 1994. He then successively served as the deputy governor of Songjiang County, the deputy governor of Changning District from 1996 to 2001.
In July 2001, he joined the third batch of Shanghai cadres to join the "Help Tibet" campaign. At 38, he was appointed as the deputy party chief of Shigatse in Tibet, one of the most remote cities of China, on the border with Nepal and Bhutan. While in Tibet, he suffered from severe altitude sickness, with symptoms of frequent headache and insomnia. His hair turned grizzled after one year as a result.[1]
After coming back from Tibet, he was appointed as the governor of Zhabei District in July 2004, and then the deputy secretary-general of the Shanghai government in May 2008.
In May 2012, he was named a member of the Shanghai municipal party standing committee and in June became Secretary-General of the Party Committee, as the political secretary to Yu Zhengsheng and then Han Zheng.[2] In January 2017, he was promoted to deputy party chief of Shanghai.[3]
On 6 December 2019, he was appointed acting Governor of Henan Province.[4] He was elected as the governor on 14 January 2020. In his Henan stint, COVID-19 pandemic smashed through China. In Henan, many tough and controversial measures were taken, such as using muck trucks and trenches to blockade the road with Hubei which was the centre of the pandemic, and putting up radical slogans such as "If you come back home while being infected with Covid-19, then you are a shameful descendent to your family".[5] Such measures were popular among Chinese netizens on Weibo, and Geng Hong was praised as the "provincial governor you should steal from others".[6]
On 31 March 2021, Yin was appointed Communist Party Secretary of Gansu.[7]
In December 2022, he was appointed Communist Party Secretary of Jiangxi, replacing Yi Lianhong.[8]
References
- ^ "上海市委副书记尹弘援藏:青丝变华发 大把大把吃药". www.guancha.cn (in Chinese). Retrieved 21 January 2023.
- ^ "尹弘任上海市委秘书长" (in Chinese). China News. Retrieved 2013-11-29.
- ^ 尹弘任中共上海市委副書記 (in Chinese). Shanghai Online. 2017-02-18.
- ^ 尹弘任河南省代理省长. People Daily (in Chinese). 2019-12-06.
- ^ He, Xiaotao. "防控肺炎病毒,"硬核"河南究竟有多硬核? | 每经网". www.nbd.com.cn. Retrieved 21 January 2023.
- ^ ""快来抄作业",面对疫情防控,河南做对了什么?_腾讯新闻". new.qq.com.
- ^ 甘肃省委主要负责同志职务调整. 新华网 (in Chinese). 2021-03-31. Retrieved 2021-03-31.
- ^ 江西省委主要负责同志职务调整 尹弘任江西省委书记. 新华网 (in Chinese). 2022-12-08. Retrieved 2022-12-08.
- 1963 births
- Living people
- Politicians from Huzhou
- Shanghai University of Technology alumni
- Chinese Communist Party politicians from Zhejiang
- Alternate members of the 19th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party
- Delegates to the 13th National People's Congress
- Political office-holders in Shanghai
- Governors of Henan
- Members of the 20th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party