Zhao Deguang (Chinese: 赵德光; born May 1962) is a retired Chinese politician of Yi ethnicity who served as mayor of Baoshan from 2015 to 2016 and party secretary from 2016 to 2021.
Zhao was born in Shilin Yi Autonomous County, Yunnan, in May 1962.[1] After resuming the college entrance examination, in 1980, he was accepted to Qujing Normal School. After graduating in 1982, he taught at Lunan County Minzu Middle School. In 1985, he entered Yunnan Education College, where he majored in Chinese language and literature. After graduation, he continued to teach at the school. He also studied at the Central Party School of the Chinese Communist Party from 1990 to 1992.[1]
Political career
Zhao was director of Lunan County Education Bureau in March 1993 and subsequently assistant secretary of the CCP Lunan County Committee in October 1997.[1] In March 1998, he was transferred to his home-county Shilin Yi Autonomous County and appointed deputy party secretary.[1] In April 2000, he was named acting magistrate of the county, confirmed in March 2001.[1] He rose to become party secretary, the top political position in the county, in May 2004.[1] He was appointed assistant mayor of Kunming in July 2004, concurrently serving as party secretary of Chenggong County.[1]
He was appointed secretary of the Political and Legal Affairs Commission of the CCP Baoshan Municipal Committee in December 2010 and was admitted to member of the Standing Committee of the CCP Baoshan Municipal Committee, the prefecture-level city's top authority.[1] He became mayor in December 2015, and then party secretary, the top political position in the city, beginning in February 2016.[1][2][3]
In April 2021, he was chosen as a counsellor of Yunnan Provincial People's Government, a post he kept until September 2022.
Downfall
On 9 September 2022, he was removed from public office and was placed on probation within the CCP for two years due to the pollution of East River in Baoshan.[4]
PB Former member of the Politburo; PLA Also a military official; CDI Member of the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection or affiliates 1For details on the civil service ranks of officials, please see Civil Service of the People's Republic of China; 2Army generals listed have attained at least the rank of Major General, which usually enjoys the same administrative privileges as a civilian official of sub-provincial rank.