Qiangba Puncog
2010 National People's Congress
14 March 2013 – 17 March 2018
15 January 2010 – 29 January 2013
16 March 2003 – 15 January 2010
Yang Chuantang
Zhang Qingli
Chamdo, Tibet
Qiangba Puncog, also spelled Champa Phuntsok (Tibetan: བྱམས་པ་ཕུན་ཚོགས་, Wylie: byams pa phun tshogs; Chinese: 向巴平措; pinyin: Xiàngbā Píngcuò; born in May 1947) was the chairman of the government of Tibet Autonomous Region of China from 2003 until January 2010. He is of Tibetan ethnicity.[1][2] He was most visible in public during the 2008 Tibetan unrest, receiving diplomats and journalists.[1] Qiangba Puncog resigned as chairman on January 12, 2010,[3] and subsequently began serving as chairman of the Standing Committee of the People's Congress of the Tibet Autonomous Region.[citation needed]
Biography
Qiangba Puncog was born in Chamdo, Tibet in May 1947. He graduated from Chongqing University, and he joined in the Chinese Communist Party in 1974.[1]
References
- ^ a b c "Who's Who in China's Leadership: Qiangba Puncog". China Internet Information Center (www.china.org.cn). Retrieved 2010-02-04.
- ^ "Qiangba Puncog's statement at press conference". China Daily. 10 April 2008. Retrieved 2010-02-04.
- ^ Canada Tibet Committee | Newsroom | WTN
Assembly seats | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by | Chairman of the Standing Committee of the Tibet Autonomous Region People's Congress 2010–2013 | Succeeded by |
Government offices | ||
Preceded by | Chairman of Tibet Autonomous Region People's Government 2003–2010 | Succeeded by |
- v
- t
- e
(1954–1959)
(1959–1964)
- Lin Boqu
- Li Jishen
- Luo Ronghuan
- Shen Junru
- Guo Moruo
- Huang Yanpei
- Peng Zhen
- Li Weihan
- Chen Shutong
Tenzin Gyatso, Dalai Lama(fled 1959; dismissed 1964)- Saifuddin Azizi
- Cheng Qian
Choekyi Gyaltsen, Panchen Erdeni(removed 1964)- He Xiangning
- Liu Bocheng
- Lin Feng
(1964–1975)
(1975–1978)
(1978–1983)
- Soong Ching-ling (died 1981)
- Nie Rongzhen (resigned 1980)
- Liu Bocheng (resigned 1980)
- Ulanhu
- Wu De (resigned 1980)
- Wei Guoqing
- Chen Yun
- Guo Moruo (died 1978)
- Tan Zhenlin
- Li Jingquan
- Zhang Dingcheng (resigned 1980; died 1981)
- Cai Chang (resigned 1980)
- Deng Yingchao
- Saifuddin Azizi
- Liao Chengzhi
- Ji Pengfei (secretary-general; resigned 1980)
- Ngapoi Ngawang Jigme
- Zhou Jianren (resigned 1980)
- Xu Deheng
- Hu Juewen
- Peng Zhen (added 1979)
- Xiao Jinguang (added 1979)
- Zhu Yunshan (added 1979; died 1981)
- Shi Liang (added 1979)
- Peng Chong (added 1980)
- Xi Zhongxun (added 1980)
- Su Yu (added 1980)
- Yang Shangkun (added 1980; secretary-general)
- Choekyi Gyaltsen, Panchen Erdeni (added 1980)
- Zhu Xuefan (added 1981)
(1983–1988)
(1988–1993)
(1993–1998)
(1998–2003)
- Tian Jiyun
- Xie Fei
- Jiang Chunyun
- Zou Jiahua
- Pagbalha Geleg Namgyai
- Wang Guangying
- Cheng Siyuan
- Buhe
- Tömür Dawamat
- Wu Jieping
- Peng Peiyun
- He Luli
- Zhou Guangzhao
Cheng Kejie(dismissed & executed 2000)- Cao Zhi
- Ding Shisun
- Cheng Siwei
- Xu Jialu
- Jiang Zhenghua
(2003–2008)
(2008–2013)
(2013–2018)
- Li Jianguo
- Wang Shengjun
- Chen Changzhi
- Yan Junqi
- Wang Chen (secretary-general)
- Shen Yueyue
- Ji Bingxuan
- Zhang Ping
- Qiangba Puncog
- Arken Imirbaki
- Wan Exiang
- Zhang Baowen
- Chen Zhu
(2018–2023)
(2023–2028)
This Tibetan biographical article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e