Ling Yun
Ling Yun | |
---|---|
凌云 | |
Minister of State Security | |
In office June 1983 – September 1985 | |
Preceded by | None |
Succeeded by | Jia Chunwang |
Personal details | |
Born | Wu Peilin 29 June 1917 Communist Party of China |
Ling Yun | |
---|---|
Hanyu Pinyin | Líng Yún |
Ling Yun (
A protégé of General Luo Ruiqing, he headed the 1st Bureau of the Ministry of Public Security during the early Maoist years, dealing with suppression of political, ethnic and religious opponents of the Communist Party.
Biography
Ling Yun was born in
After the outbreak of the Chinese Civil War, Ling became a member of the North China land reform team led by Kang Sheng, and was active in seizing land from wealthy landlords and distributing it to peasants. In August 1948, he served as the Director of the Public Security Bureau (police chief) of the city of Weifang, after it was captured by the People's Liberation Army, and from 1949 to 1952 he was Deputy Director of the Public Security Bureau of Jinan, the capital of Shandong.
From 1952 to 1966, Ling was based in Beijing, as Deputy Director and then Director of the 1st Bureau of the Ministry of Public Security, and from 1963 Deputy Minister of Public Security, handling very sensitive issues, as his Bureau dealt with the suppression of political, ethnic and religious separatism.[1]
After the outbreak of the Cultural Revolution in 1966, the leadership of the Ministry of Public Security (with the notable exception of the Minister himself, Xie Fuzhi, who was an ally of the radicals) was accused of having created "an underground counter-revolutionary Ministry of Public Security headed by Luo Ruiqing" (the previous Minister). All 7 Deputy Ministers were removed from office, as were 63 department heads within the Ministry. Ling himself was expelled from the Communist Party, arrested, tortured by Red Guards, and then sent to do manual labor.[1]
After the Cultural Revolution, Ling Yun was restored to all his posts and was again appointed Deputy Ministrer of Public Security in 1978, serving until 1983.[1]
In June 1983,
As a result, the new Ministry of State Security was established, and Ling Yun, as an experienced counterintelligence specialist, became the first Minister. Ling remained in office until September 1985, when he retired and was replaced by the much younger Jia Chunwang
A centenarian, Ling died in Beijing on March 15, 2018. On March 21, Xinhua News Agency released a message: “An outstanding member of the Communist Party of China, a long-tested and loyal communist fighter, Comrade Ling Yun, former Party Secretary and Minister of the Ministry of State Security, died on March 15, 2018 due to illness". On May 13, the People's Daily also published an obituary full of praise.[1][2]
References
- ^ a b c d e The death of Ling Yun, the former Minister of the Ministry of State Security, Xinhua News Agency, 2018-03-21
- ^ 国家安全部原部长凌云逝世,享年101岁 (in Chinese); accessed 22 March 2018.