Zhou Benshun
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Zhao Yong (Deputy Secretary)
Zhou Benshun | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
周本顺 | |||||||
| Party Secretary of Hebei | |||||||
| In office 20 March 2013 – 31 July 2015 | |||||||
| Deputy | Zhang Qingwei (Governor) Zhao Yong (Deputy Secretary) | ||||||
| Preceded by | Zhang Qingli | ||||||
| Succeeded by | Zhao Kezhi | ||||||
| Secretary-General of the Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission | |||||||
| In office 2007–2012 | |||||||
| Preceded by | Wang Shengjun | ||||||
| Succeeded by | Wang Yongqing | ||||||
| Party Secretary of Shaoyang | |||||||
| In office August 1995 – November 2000 | |||||||
| Preceded by | Sun Zaifu | ||||||
| Succeeded by | Jiang Jianguo | ||||||
| Personal details | |||||||
| Born | February 1953 (age 73) Xupu County, Hunan, China | ||||||
| Party | Chinese Communist Party (expelled) | ||||||
| Alma mater | Changchun Institute of Geology Hunan University Wuhan University | ||||||
| Chinese name | |||||||
| Traditional Chinese | 周本順 | ||||||
| Simplified Chinese | 周本顺 | ||||||
| |||||||
Zhou Benshun (Chinese: 周本顺; born February 1953) is a former Chinese politician. Between 2013 and 2015, he served as the Chinese Communist Party Committee Secretary and the top official of Hebei Province.[1][2] Prior to his post in Hebei, Zhou Benshun was the Secretary-General of the Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission, serving under disgraced domestic security chief Zhou Yongkang.[3][4]
On July 24, 2015, he was detained for investigation by the Central Commission for Discipline Inspection, then expelled from the party several months later.[5][6] Zhou was the first incumbent provincial party secretary to be targeted by the Chinese government's anti-graft campaign since 2012.[7][8]
Zhou Benshun was born in 1953 in Xupu County, Hunan province. He joined the Chinese Communist Party in September 1971.[1][2]
From 1972 to 1975 Zhou attended Changchun Institute of Geology (now part of Jilin University) in Jilin province.[9] After finishing university in December 1975, he taught at the Hunan School of Geology until 1985.[2]
In January 1985, Zhou Benshun began working at the Policy Research Office of Hunan province, becoming its director in 1994.[9] At the end of 1994 he was appointed Chinese Communist Party Deputy Committee Secretary of the prefecture-level city of Shaoyang, Hunan, rising to Chinese Communist Party Committee Secretary the following year.[9] From 2000 to 2003 he was the Director of Public Security of Hunan province, i.e., the provincial police chief.[1] A year later, Zhou entered the Hunan provincial Party Standing Committee as the head of the provincial Political and Legal Affairs Commission (Zhengfawei).[2]
In November 2003 Zhou was transferred to the central government in Beijing to become the Deputy Secretary General of the Central Political and Legal Affairs Commission,[1][2] working under Secretary General Wang Shengjun. In March 2008, Wang was promoted to President of the Supreme Court, and Zhou succeeded Wang as secretary general. For the next five years Zhou Benshun worked essentially as chief of staff to Zhou Yongkang (no relation), one of China's top leader (a member of the Politburo Standing Committee) who was then the head of the commission.[10] During his Zhengfawei stint, Zhou served in a series of other roles, including leading the office of Xinjiang affairs, and deputy director of the Central Public Security Comprehensive Management Commission; he was seen as one of the leading figures of the Zhengfawei world and a trusted lieutenant of Zhou Yongkang.[11]
In 2012, the son of Ling Jihua crashed in a Ferrari on one of Beijing's ring roads, unleashing highly unanticipated political consequences. Some overseas Chinese media reported that Zhou Benshun was dispatched to handle the fallout from the crash.[12]
In March 2013, Zhou Benshun was appointed the party chief of Hebei province, replacing Zhang Qingli, who became Vice Chairman of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference. He was a member of the 18th Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party.[1][2]