Qiao Guanhua

From Infogalactic: the planetary knowledge core
Jump to: navigation, search

<templatestyles src="Module:Hatnote/styles.css"></templatestyles>

Qiao Guanhua
乔冠华
Foreign Minister of the People's Republic of China
In office
1974–1976
Preceded by Ji Pengfei
Succeeded by Huang Hua
Personal details
Born (1913-03-28)March 28, 1913
Yancheng, Republic of China
Died Script error: The function "death_date_and_age" does not exist.
Beijing, People's Republic of China
Political party Communist Party of China
Spouse(s) Zhang Hanzhi

Qiao Guanhua (simplified Chinese: 乔冠华; traditional Chinese: 喬冠華; pinyin: Qiáo Guānhuá; Wade–Giles: Ch'iao Kuan-hua; March 28, 1913 - September 22, 1983[1]) was a politician and diplomat in the People's Republic of China and played an important role in the talks with Henry Kissinger on the opening of China and the drafting of the Shanghai Communiqué.

Biography

Early life and revolution

Qiao Guanhua was born in Yancheng in 1913; his father was a local land-owner, considered relatively illuminated. Since his childhood, Qiao Guanhua showed a great intelligence, especially remarkable memory, so he repeatedly skipped school grades, and was admitted to the Tsinghua University at the age of 16. While he was studying philosophy there, he came in contact with Marxism and engaged in several activities led by the Communist Party of China.

Qiao Guanhua graduated in 1933 and went to Japan to continue his studies at the Tokyo Imperial University. He joined the Japanese Communist Party, leading to his expulsion from the university. He was then forced to travel to Germany, where he obtained a PhD at the University of Tübingen in 1936, when he was 23 years old.

As he returned in China, Second Sino-Japanese War had broken out. Qiao Guanhua engaged mainly in journalism with the pen name of Qiaomu (喬木, meaning Tree, also the pen name of Hu Qiaomu), working on the international review of several newspapers in Hong Kong.

Admitted to the Communist Party of China in the autumn of 1942, Qiao Guanhua was called to Chongqing to take charge of The Masses' Weekly and the international column of the Xinhua Daily. In Chongqing, he worked directly under Zhou Enlai, who recognized his interest in foreign affairs and took him as his personal assistant for international matters. After the war, he accompanied Zhou Enlai to Shanghai with the CPC delegation, and there he established the English-language Xinhua Weekly. At the end of 1946, he returned to Hong Kong as president of the local Xinhua News Agency branch.

After the establishment of the People's Republic of China

After the establishment of the People's Republic of China, Qiao Guanhua continued to work in foreign affairs. He served as head of the Information Bureau of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People's Republic of China, deputy director of the General Office of the Central People's Government, vice-president of the Chinese People's Institute of Foreign Affairs, head of the Asia Department of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and vice-minister of Foreign Affairs.

Qiao Guanhua took part at several international delegations. In 1950, he accompanied Special Representative Wu Xiuquan to the United Nations Security Council to protest against the United States's shielding of Chiang Kai-shek's regime in Taiwan; in 1951 he was major consultant to the head of the Chinese delegation to the Panmunjeom talks during the Korean War; in April 1954 accompanied Zhou Enlai to the Geneva Conference on Indochina, and once again traveled to the 1961-1962 Geneva summit on Laos with Chen Yi.

The Cultural Revolution period

With the outbreak of the Cultural Revolution in 1966, Qiao Guanhua was denounced along with Chen Yi and Ji Pengfei as a counterrevolutionary, but Premier Zhou Enlai protected them and they survived the turmoil of that period. In 1969, Qiao was appointed head of the Chinese delegation for the talks with the Soviet Union regarding the Zhenbao Island, where military fighting had erupted. In 1971, he led the Chinese delegation to the 26th Session of the United Nations General Assembly when China's seat was handed over to the People's Republic of China, and continued to lead Chinese delegations to the UN until 1976. In 1972, when President of the United States Richard Nixon visited China, he was put in charge of negotiations with Henry Kissinger and drafting the joint communiqué.

Starting from 1973, Qiao Guanhua enjoyed a more prominent role. He was elected a member of the CPC Central Committee, and later was appointed Minister of Foreign Affairs in 1974, confirmed by the 4th National People's Congress in 1975. However, after 1973, he became an increasingly close supporter of the Gang of Four. Following Mao Zedong's death in 1976 and the Gang's arrest, Qiao was quickly removed from office and replaced as Foreign Minister by Huang Hua, though he nominally remained an adviser to the Chinese People's Association for Friendship with Foreign Countries.

He died of cancer in September 1983, aged 70.

Personal life

Qiao Guanhua married with diplomat Gong Peng in 1943. The two had a son, Qiao Zonghuai, who served as vice-minister of Foreign Affairs. Their daughter, Qiao Songdu, graduated from Tianjin Medical University. In 2008, she finished the book Qiao Guanhua and Gong Peng--my father and my mother ). In 1970 Gong Peng died of illness. Upon Mao Zedong's suggestion, Qiao Guanhua in 1973 married Zhang Hanzhi, adopted daughter of the revolutionary journalist Zhang Shizhao and English interpreter for Chairman Mao himself, after she divorced Hong Junyan.[1] Hung Huang is Qiao Guanhua's stepdaughter. In 1983 Qiao Guanhua died of cancer.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Chairman Mao's tutor dies at 73." Shanghai Daily. January 28, 2008. Retrieved on October 22, 2010.
Political offices
Preceded by Foreign Minister of the People's Republic of China
1974–1976
Succeeded by
Huang Hua