Wang Wulong

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Preceded byGu Hao [zh]
Succeeded byLi Yuanchao
DeputyWang Hongmin [zh] (mayor)
Wang Wulong
王武龙
Vice Chairman of Jiangsu Provincial People's Congress
In office
January 2003  November 2006
ChairmanLi Yuanchao
Wang Shouting
Chairman of Nanjing Municipal People's Congress
In office
January 1998  January 2003
Preceded byGu Hao [zh]
Succeeded byLi Yuanchao
Party Secretary of Nanjing
In office
June 1995  October 2001
DeputyWang Hongmin [zh] (mayor)
Preceded byGu Hao [zh]
Succeeded byLi Yuanchao
Mayor of Nanjing
In office
June 1993  December 1994
Party SecretaryGu Hao [zh]
Preceded byWang Rongbing [zh]
Succeeded byWang Hongmin [zh]
Mayor of Xuzhou
In office
April 1990  May 1991
Party SecretaryZheng Liangyu [zh]
Li Yangzhen
Preceded byXu Zhonglin
Succeeded byWang Xilong [zh]
Personal details
BornFebruary 1942 (age 84)
Huai'an County, Jiangsu, Republic of China
PartyChinese Communist Party (1965–2006; expelled)
Alma materNanjing Forestry University
Chinese name
Simplified Chinese
Traditional Chinese
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinWáng Wǔlóng

Wang Wulong (Chinese: 王武龙; born February 1942) is a former Chinese politician who spent his entire career in east China's Jiangsu province. He was investigated by the party's anti-graft watchdog in October 2006. Previously he served as vice chairman of Jiangsu Provincial People's Congress. He served as chairman of Nanjing Municipal People's Congress and before that, party secretary and mayor of Nanjing. He was an alternate of the 15th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party. He was the first vice ministerial-level official in Nanjing to be targeted by anti-corruption authorities since 2008, before Yang Weize, Ji Jianye, Miao Ruilin, and Zhang Jinghua.[1]

Downfall

References

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