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Yao Yilin

Chinese politician (1917–1994)


Chinese politician (1917–1994)

FieldValue
imageYao Yilin and his mother (cropped).jpg
officeDirector of the State Planning Commission
term_startJune 1987
term_endDecember 1989
premierZhao Ziyang
Li Peng
predecessorSong Ping
successorZou Jiahua
term_start1August 1980
term_end1June 1983
premier1Zhao Ziyang
predecessor1Yu Qiuli
successor1Song Ping
office2Vice Premier of China
term_start225 March 1988
term_end25 March 1993
premier2Li Peng
office3Director of the General Office of the Chinese Communist Party
term_start3December 1978
term_end3April 1982
leader3Hua Guofeng
Hu Yaobang
predecessor3Wang Dongxing
successor3Hu Qili
office4Minister of Commerce
term_start418 August 1978
term_end4October 1978
premier4Hua Guofeng
predecessor4
successor4Jin Ming
nameYao Yilin
native_name姚依林
native_name_langzh
birth_nameWilliam Yiu Hak-kwong
birth_date
birth_placeBritish Hong Kong
death_date
death_placeBeijing, China
partyChinese Communist Party (1935–1994)
spouseZhou Bin
Hong Shouzi
childrenYao Mingrui
Yao Mingshan
Yao Mingduan
Yao Mingwei
relationsWang Qishan (son-in-law)
Meng Xuenong (son-in-law)
alma_materTsinghua University
allegiancePeople's Republic of China
branch
serviceyears1935–1949
battlesSecond Sino-Japanese War
Chinese Civil War

Li Peng Hu Yaobang Hong Shouzi Yao Mingshan Yao Mingduan Yao Mingwei Meng Xuenong (son-in-law) Chinese Civil War Yao Yilin (; September 6, 1917 – December 11, 1994) was a Chinese politician and soldier who was Vice Premier of China from 1979 to 1988 and First Vice Premier from 1988 to 1993.

Early life and career

He was born in Hong Kong in 1917, and spent his early years in Guichi, Anhui. Yao joined the Chinese Communist Party in 1935. During the December 9th Movement, Yao was the secretary of the Beijing city Party study group. During the Second Sino-Japanese War, he became the vice-director of the Finance Office of the Communist-controlled area. This began a long period of leadership in financial positions. In 1979, Yao became the Vice-Premier of the State Council. At the 13th National Congress of the Chinese Communist Party in 1987, Yao was elected to the Politburo Standing Committee of the Chinese Communist Party and later rose to the position of First Vice Premier of the People's Republic of China.

Role in the 1989 Tiananmen Square Protests

During the Tiananmen Square protests of 1989, Yao Yilin held the position of First Vice Premier of China and was responsible for economic planning and management. Yao was associated with the conservative side of the party which denied that the students were patriotic and advocated a quick suppression to the movement. Yao Yilin and premier Li Peng were both able to effectively oppose Zhao Ziyang, then general secretary of CCP, in order to ensure that conservative influence would dominate the decisions made in the CCP.

Involvement with April 26 Editorial

The April 26 editorial published in the People's Daily angered the students and greatly contributed to the growing numbers in the square. The official report of the Chinese Communist Party stated that the movement was not patriotic and the students were being led by a small group of anti-communist conspirators to cause "turmoil". Deng Xiaoping's own opinions were placed in the editorial to help support it and ensure that the people of China would obediently accept the party's view of the protests. However, two opposing sides emerged in the party: one supported keeping the editorial the same, the other wanted to change the editorial to appease the students. Yao rejected Zhao's offer to take the blame for changing the party's opinion of the movement because the people would begin to doubt the cohesiveness of the party. Yao proposed less conciliatory action with the students. Instead he wanted to further prevent other political leaders from supporting the protests, force students to end class boycotts, and maintain labor discipline in industry and commerce to keep production on track. Yao Yilin and Li Peng were the leaders of the conservative faction and gained support by siding with Deng Xiaoping's view of the protests. Deng Xiaoping held a considerable amount of honour and prestige in China because of his long term involvement with the Communist Party and his close ties with China's previous iconic leader, Mao Zedong. Yao slowly pulled support away from Zhao Ziyang's reformist faction by making his supporters believe that Zhao sided too much with the students over the clarification of the editorial. Yao Yilin attacked Zhao because he blamed the party for allowing corruption to go unchecked and making democracy and law worse in China. Zhao found himself in a difficult situation when Yao and other conservatives worked together and opposed the decisions he made with other reformers such as Chen Yizi and Bao Tong.

Justification for Martial Law

Yao Yilin and Li Peng are the two figures most associated with the initiation of martial law on June 4. The need for martial law came from the fear that the continuing stream of students entering the square were secretly coerced by anti-communist powers. Party leaders were afraid that these powers were continuing to fill Tiananmen Square with students and protesters that would only function to obstruct the CCP from governing the Chinese people. Martial law was seen by the conservative faction as the only method that could bring about a crackdown with enough force to prevent future protesters from attempting to reach the square. According to Tony Saich, Yao was such a strong supporter of martial law because he saw it as a last resort option to end the protests and return proper functioning to Beijing. In a discussion with other party leaders, Yao Yilin was quoted saying "The nature of this student movement has changed. It began as a natural expression of grief and has turned into social turmoil." He advocated that all unofficially recognized student organizations should be considered illegal because he feared they would spread the turmoil outside Beijing and throughout the rest of the country. Yao was also the only member of the Standing Committee to refuse dialogue with the students because he believed that a small group of conspirators were behind these student organizations and dialogue with them would only strengthen their ability to overthrow the CCP. Chow Chung-Yan discusses in his article published in the South China Morning Post how Li Peng and Yao Yilin favoured martial law because it would allow the hardliners to hold the power they had in the country.

Death

Yao died of an illness on December 11, 1994. He was 77 years old.

Family

Yao and his wife Hong Shouzi had four children, including daughters Yao Mingrui, Yao Mingshan, Yao Mingduan and son Yao Mingwei. Yao Mingshan's husband is former Chinese Vice President Wang Qishan. Yao Mingduan's husband is Meng Xuenong, the former Governor of Shanxi and former Mayor of Beijing.

References

References

  1. "姚明瑞同志逝世消息".
  2. Wolfgang Bartke. (1 January 1997). "Who was Who in the People's Republic of China". Walter de Gruyter.
  3. Zhang Liang. Tiananmen Papers. Public Affairs, 2002. p. 639. {{ISBN. 978-0-349-11469-9
  4. George H. W. Bush Library. "White House Situation Room Files, Tiananmen Square Crisis File, China – Part 1 Of 5 Tianamen Square Crisis" Tiananmen Square and U.S.-China relations, 1989–1993, May–June 1989. p 76. Retrieved November 12, 2010, from Archives Unbound.
  5. Ming Pao. "Balance of Power" Daily Report, June 1989. p 5. Retrieved November 18, 2010, from Foreign Broadcast Information Service Daily Reports: http://docs.newsbank.com/s/HistArchive/fbisdoc/FBISX/11EF37C662B613F0/10367B8A6237537E
  6. Cheng Ming. "CPC Split" Daily Report, June 1989. p 28. Retrieved November 18, 2010, from Foreign Broadcast Information Service Daily Reports: http://docs.newsbank.com/s/HistArchive/fbisdoc/FBISX/11EECBE2EDFEB820/10367B8A6237537E
  7. Saich, Tony. "The Rise and Fall of the Beijing People's Movement." Contemporary China Center, Australian National University, no. 9, July 1990. p 201. Retrieved November 23, 2010, from JSTOR.
  8. Chow Chung-Yan. "Zhao Ziyang alleges Li Peng 1989 scheming; Late leader's explosive memoirs out" South China Morning Post, May 2009. p 1. Retrieved November 18, 2010, from LexisNexis.
  9. 裴毅然 (2015-01-16). ''紅色生活史: 革命歲月那些事(1921-1949)'' (in Chinese). 時報文化出版企業. {{ISBN. 9789865729226.
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