Lin Duo

Lin Duo (Chinese: 林铎; pinyin: Lín Duó; born March 1956) is a Chinese politician currently serving as Communist Party secretary of Gansu province. He formerly served as Communist Party Secretary and Mayor of Harbin, and Secretary of the Commission for Discipline Inspection of Liaoning Province.

Lin Duo
林铎
Communist Party Secretary of Gansu
Assumed office
1 April 2017
Preceded byWang Sanyun
Governor of Gansu
In office
1 April 2016  11 April 2017
Preceded byLiu Weiping
Succeeded byTang Renjian
Communist Party Secretary of Harbin
In office
January 2012  August 2014
Preceded byGai Ruyin
Succeeded byChen Haibo
Mayor of Harbin
In office
July 2010  January 2012
Preceded byZhang Xiaolian
Succeeded bySong Xibin
Personal details
BornMarch 1956 (age 64)
Heze, Shandong, China
Political partyCommunist Party of China

Biography

Lin Duo was born in March 1956 in Heze, Shandong province. In November 1974, he enlisted in the People's Liberation Army Navy and served as a submariner for five years.[1][2] He joined the Communist Party of China in October 1975. After leaving the military in 1979, he worked in the Ministry of Aerospace Industry.[1][2]

In 1982, Lin began working for the road administration office of Huairou County in suburban Beijing, embarking on a career in the Beijing government lasting nearly three decades. He rose through the ranks first in Huairou County, then in the Beijing Highway Bureau, and the Beijing Urban Management Committee. He was appointed governor of Beijing's Xicheng District in 2003, and Communist Party Secretary of Xicheng in 2006.[1][2] During his tenure in Beijing he studied at the Beijing Party School on a part-time basis, earning a bachelor's degree in 1993 and a master's in 1997.[1][2]

In July 2010, following the merger of Xicheng District with Xuanwu District, Lin Duo was transferred to Harbin, the capital of Heilongjiang province in Northeast China, to serve as its Deputy Party Secretary and Mayor. In January 2012 he was promoted to party chief of Harbin, and entered the Heilongjiang provincial party standing committee three months later, ascending to sub-provincial ranks.[1][2]

In August 2014, during the anti-corruption campaign under Xi Jinping, Lin was transferred to Liaoning province, serving as Secretary of the Commission for Discipline Inspection, the provincial anti-corruption body, and a member of the provincial party standing committee.[1] In Liaoning, Lin was instrumental in leading the investigation into the Liaoning vote-buying scandal, which led to the suspension of the provincial People's Congress.[3]

On 1 April 2016, Lin Duo was made acting Governor of Gansu province in northwest China, succeeding Liu Weiping, who had resigned and transferred to an academic position. At the time of Lin's appointment in Gansu, the number of native Gansu officials on its provincial standing committees was a mere two people: Xian Hui and Yu Haiyan (Xian would be transferred out of Gansu only a few months later, and Yu would come under investigation for corruption). Lin's appointment to the governor post was also unusual in that he went directly from a discipline chief position to governor.[3] On 11 April 2017, Lin was appointed as the Communist Party Secretary of Gansu.[4]

Lin was an alternate member of the 18th Central Committee of the Communist Party of China and a full member of the 19th Central Committee.[1]

gollark: Finite set of programs doesn't mean non-TC, does it?
gollark: Just enumerate all possible strings in order, silly.
gollark: Or "possibly TC but you can't know unless you throw ridiculously insane amounts of computing power at it".
gollark: Hmm, perhaps if you make it use the most recent likely-true-but-hard-to-prove maths problem somehow...
gollark: The twin prime conjecture, say?

References

  1. "Lin Duo" (in Chinese). National Chengchi University. 2015-06-05.
  2. "Lin Duo". People's Daily (in Chinese). Retrieved 2016-04-02.
  3. "林铎任甘肃代省长:三度跨省履新 在京工作近30年". Sohu (in Chinese). 2016-04-02.
  4. "刘赐贵任海南省委书记 林铎任甘肃省委书记". Xinhua. 2017-04-01. Archived from the original on 2017-04-02.
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