Yang Chengxu

Chinese diplomat
杨成绪Chair, PECC ChinaIn office
1995 – September 2005Preceded byLi LuyeSucceeded byMei PingPresident, China Institute of International StudiesIn office
May 1993 – November 2001Preceded byDu GongSucceeded bySong MingjiangChinese Ambassador to AustriaIn office
November 1985 – October 1989Preceded byWang ShuSucceeded byHu Benyao Personal detailsBorn1930 (age 93–94)
Qingdao, ShandongAlma materFudan University
Xinhua Foreign Languages Institute

Yang Chengxu is a senior Chinese diplomat to German-speaking countries.

He was born in Qingdao in 1930 and later moved to Shanghai with his family.[1] In 1952, he received his bachelor's degree in German Literature from Fudan University and started to work for the All-China Journalists Association. In 1962, Yang was sent to the Xinhua News Agency-founded Foreign Languages Institute to take advanced training courses.[2] In 1973, he joined the Chinese Foreign Ministry and served successively as Secretary, Counsellor and Minister-Counsellor in Chinese Embassies in Federal Republic of Germany and German Democratic Republic.[3]

In 1985, he was appointed Chinese Ambassador to Austria and was succeeded by Hu Benyao in 1989.[4] He was then appointed director of the Department of Policy Planning and deputy director of the Department of West European Affairs of the Foreign Ministry.

From May 1993, he succeeded Du Gong as President of the China Institute of International Studies and was relieved from the position in November 2001.[5] He also chaired PECC China, the China National Committee for Pacific Economic Cooperation (CNCPEC) from 1995 to 2005.[6]

References

  1. ^ Zong, Diaoyi (1999). "Yang Chenxu and his German teacher". Jiang Hai Qiao Sheng (10). Retrieved 11 November 2013. (in Chinese)
  2. ^ Yang, Chengxu (2004). "Memories of My Student Life at Erwai". In BISU Editorial (ed.). BISU: 40 Years Old. China Youth Press. pp. 409–412. ISBN 7500659717.
  3. ^ "The Rise of a Multipolar World: Sino-European Relations in the Last Decades of the Cold War (1960s-1980s)" (PDF). Machiavelli Center for Cold War Studies. p. 4.
  4. ^ Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the People's Republic of China. "Chinese Ambassadors to Austria".
  5. ^ "CIIS in Brief". China Institute of International Studies.
  6. ^ China National Committee for Pacific Economic Cooperation. "Leadership".(in Chinese)


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