Wu Yi: Vice premier of the People's Republic of China

Wu Yi said...
"The Chinese government always attaches great importance to the growth of woman and child and is endeavoring to resolve the urgent issues that restrict woman and child development. "You say...
1 comments to date. The most recent comments:erick from kenya (June 15, 2011)
quite good and innovative projecton kenyan highway
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Iron Lady Still Looking for The Right Guy!
Wu Yi, the vice premier of China's Communist Party, is the most powerful woman in China. While she is known as "China's iron lady," she is also an accomplished single woman looking for a great guy.
Wu was born in the city of Wuhan, Hubei Province in November 1938. She graduated from the Oil Refinery Department of the Beijing Petroleum Institute where she majored in oil refinery engineering. She joined the Communist Party of China (CPC) in April 1962. After graduating, she worked in the Lanzhou Oil Refinery in Gansu Province. From 1965 to 1967, she worked in the Technology Department of the Ministry of Petroleum Industry.
She had a number of positions at the Beijing Dongfanghong Refinery from 1967 to 1983, becoming the deputy director. She became deputy manager and party secretary of the Beijing Yanshan Petrochemical Corporation in 1983, where she remained until 1988.
Wu was elected vice mayor of Beijing in 1988, overseeing the city’s foreign trade and industrial development. She left the post in 1991 to become the vice minister of Foreign Economic Relations and Trade, rising to minister of the former Ministry of Foreign Trade and Economic Cooperation.
In 1987 she became an alternate member of the Thirteenth CCP Central Committee, China’s ruling elite, becoming a full member of the Fourteenth and Fifteenth CCP Central Committees in 1992 and 1997. She is a member of the 16th CPC Central Committee and its political bureau.
Gossip swirls around Wu because she is unmarried and is pursued by high-profile suitors. With just the slightest hint of coyness, she says "I'm not committed to celibacy." She says that in her youth she had an ideal image of a man, but he "doesn't exist in real life."
Wu had wanted to establish a career before starting a family. "I spent 20 years in the backwoods. When I got out, I was already too old. Plus work was hectic. So I gave up."
