'Qiao Shi' (; born December
1924) is a
politician in the
People's Republic of China. He was born as 'Jiang Zhitong' () in
Shanghai,
China, to parents of
Dinghai,
Zhejiang province ancestry. He is said to be distantly related to
Chiang Kai-shek's family and this was the cause for the persecution he suffered during the
Cultural Revolution. A recognised international studies expert within the
Communist Party, Qiao Shi was at one time
ranked third in the Communist Party leadership. Despite Western speculation in the
1990s, Qiao Shi never rose to paramount power and retired in
1998.
Early life
Qiao Shi became involved with the anti-
Kuomintang student movement in his youth, and joined the
Communist Party of China in August of
1940. To facilitate undercover work, and also to show his revolution zeal, he changed his name from the original Jiang Zhitong (蒋志彤) to Jiang Qiaoshi (蒋乔石), a name which happened to differ from that of
Chiang Kai-shek by just two strokes. He was educated at
Tongji University,
Shanghai. Qiao Shi is married to wife Yu Wen, and they have two sons and two daughters.
Rise to power
After the founding of the
People's Republic of China in
1949, Qiao Shi worked in the
Communist Youth League system for a number of years. From
1954 to
1962 he worked at
Anshan Iron and Steel Development Company. From
1963, he worked in the Communist Party's central International Liaison Department, which was responsible for policy formation in foreign affairs. Starting as an analyst, he rose to be Department Head in
1982, and became an alternate member of the
central Secretariat. Subsequently he also held the positions of head of the General Office, and of the Organization Department.
During the
Cultural Revolution, Qiao Shi and his family members were persecuted due to their distant biological relation to
Chiang Kai-shek; moreover, Qiao Shi's name in Chinese was very similar to that of
Chiang Kai-shek. Fed up with the persecution and humiliation, one of Qiao Shi's son convinced the rest of the family to change the surname by either adopting their mother's last name ''Li'', or simply dropping the original surname ''Jiang''. Such move was viewed as revolutionary by
Red Guards and other
Cultural Revolution zealots at the time because it was viewed as severing the tie to the evil past. Qiao Shi, at the mean time, like many other persecuted cadres, was in jail and powerless to do anything to prevent his children's action, and in the post
Cultural Revolution era, nobody in the family bothered to change the names again, so the names remained as they were, including that of Qiao Shi.
In
1985, after a major defection by Yu Qiangsheng, a director of the National Security Department, which resulted in the arrest of
Larry Wu-Tai Chin, the Chinese agent in
Central Intelligence Agency, Qiao Shi succeeded Chen Pixian and was placed in charge of national security and intelligence. From
1985 to
1998 he was the head of the Communist Party's central Secrets Committee (中央保密委员会). From
1986, he became a Vice Premier of the
State Council. During this time, he also took charge of law and order, and became prominent in the promulgation of new laws as the Communist Party sought to establish a
Rule of Law to counteract the excesses of
Mao-era dictatorship.
From March 27, 1993 to March 16, 1998, he was the Chairman of the
Standing Committee of the National People's Congress. As head of the legislature, he was officially ranked third in political positions in the
People's Republic of China. Qiao Shi gained popularity during this time because of a stated commitment to the
Rule of Law, in contrast to then-President
Jiang Zemin's tendency for self-promotion.
In
1998 Qiao Shi, then 74, retired from politics officially due to his age. However, media speculation from Hong Kong, Taiwan and the west hold that Qiao was involved in a power struggle with Jiang Zemin, and eventually lost.
Western speculation
In the early
1990s there was considerable speculation outside of China that Qiao Shi would rise to further prominence. Some pointed to his being virtually untouched by the fallout of the
Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, despite his alleged pro-democracy sympathies. Others claimed that his appointment as the Chairman of the
Standing Committee of the
National People's Congress was actually a demotion because the post was mostly ceremonial despite being equally ranked with Qiao Shi's previous posts. It was also claimed that Qiao Shi (born with surname ''Jiang''), was related to
Chiang Kai-shek, and could help to resolve the
Taiwan issue. There was hope that, with Qiao Shi as leader, the Communist Party of China would pursue further reforms towards a more legalist and democratic system of government. However, the speculation turned out unfounded and Qiao Shi retired in
1998 from his number three position as Chairman of the
National People's Congress.
See also
★
Dangan