Fu Ying (born January 1953) is a Chinese politician and diplomat, best known for her terms as the ambassador to the Philippines, Australia, and the United Kingdom, as well as Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs.
Early life
Fu was born in Hohhot, Inner Mongolia, in 1953. Her father was a student of Ai Siqi and she is of Mongol descent.
An ethnic Mongol, Fu Ying is the first woman, and the only ethnic minority woman, to serve as Vice-Minister of Foreign Affairs since 1979, and one of only two to serve in Chinese history. Fu graduated from the Beijing Foreign Studies University.
Diplomatic career
In 1976, she became the official interpreter of the diplomatic service.
She led the Chinese Delegation during talks with North Korea that led to the latter country's decision (later reneged on) to abandon nuclear weapons.[1] From 2004 to 2007 she was the ambassador to Australia. She was the Chinese ambassador to the United Kingdom from March 2007 to 2009. In February 2010 she returned to China and was replaced by Liu Xiaoming. She was Vice Foreign Minister from January 2010-March 2013.
In October 2012, Fu visited Manila in an effort to persuade the Philippines to continue bilateral discussions to address the South China Sea territorial disputes and to avoid involving the United States or taking the dispute to an international forum.[2]: 122 The Philippines responded by initiating an arbitration against China.[2]: 122
On 8 August 2016, the Philippines dispatched former president Fidel V. Ramos to Hong Kong to mitigate tensions following the result of the South China Sea Arbitration.[2]: 129 Fu met with Ramos and Wu Shicun (president of the National Institute for South China Sea Studies).[2]: 129 Ramos conveyed the Philippines' willingness to engage in formal discussions with China and the three issued a statement in their personal capacities emphasizing cooperation and dialogue between the two countries.[2]: 129
1993–1997 First Secretary, Director and Counsellor, Department of Asian Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs
1997–1998 Minister Counsellor, Embassy in Indonesia
1998–2000 Ambassador to the Philippines
2000–2003 Director-General, Department of Asian Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs
2003–2007 Ambassador to Australia
Mar 2007–2010 Ambassador to the United Kingdom
2009–2013 Vice Foreign Minister of PRC
2013–2017 Chairperson of the Foreign Affairs Committee of China's 12th National People's Congress
2017–2019 Vice Chair of the Foreign Affairs Committee of China's 13th National People's Congress
2019 Honorary Dean of Institute of International Relations and Chairman of Center for International Strategy and Security of Tsinghua University[5]
A 2019 Report by the Hoover Institution of Stanford University stated that Fu Ying is the "senior figure in a growing number of US–China interactions," especially with U.S. think tanks.[6]
Personal life
Fu Ying tries to adhere to elements of traditional Inner Mongolian culture in her personal life. She drinks suutei tsai (奶茶, Hohhot-style milk tea) on the weekends, listens to the traditional Mongol long song, and eats Inner Mongolian food.[7] She has one daughter by her husband, ethnologist Hao Shiyuan (郝时远).[8]
^Dong, Qianchao; Xiao, Jing, eds. (March 8, 2013). 傅莹:从电影放映员到外交官 [Fu Ying: From Film Projectionist to Diplomat] (in Chinese). People's Daily Online. Retrieved March 10, 2013.