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Cao Diqiu (Chinese: 曹荻秋) (Wade–Giles Ts'ao Ti-ch'iu) (August 1, 1909 – March 29, 1976) was a Chinese Communist revolutionary and politician.
Biography
Cao Diqiu was born in Ziyang, Sichuan, China. He joined the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in 1929. After graduating from Sichuan University, he went to northern Jiangsu Province after the outbreak of the Second Sino-Japanese War to participate in guerrilla activities.
In November 1949, Cao Diqiu served as the third secretary of the Chongqing Municipal Committee and deputy mayor of Chongqing. He was de-facto in charge of the work of the municipal government. Cao was unanimously elected as Mayor of Chongqing in January 1951 by the Chongqing Municipal People's Congress. He later became the municipal committee's first secretary in 1952, holding both offices concurrently. In 1954, Cao was also chosen as the third secretary of the Sichuan Provincial Committee.
In November 1955, Cao was transferred to Shanghai and served as deputy secretary of the Shanghai Municipal Committee of the CCP. In December, the first Shanghai People's Congress unanimously elected him as deputy mayor of Shanghai. In July 1956, he was elected as Secretary of the Municipal Secretariat. In January 1957, he was appointed as the Executive Vice Mayor. In December 1965, he was elected as the third mayor of Shanghai with a unanimous vote by the People's Congress.
At the start of the Cultural Revolution, Cao presided over the daily work of the Shanghai Municipal Party Committee due to Chen Pixian, then First Secretary of the Municipal Committee still recovering from his illness at the time of May 1966. In 1967, Cao was deposed and arrested alongside the rest of the Municipal Committee in the wake of the January Storm. During a struggle session, Cao was forced by the left-radical rebels to kneel on an overhead maintenance vehicle with his arms tied behind his back and a wooden sign hung around his neck, and paraded through busy downtown areas such as Nanjing Road, an act which exposed him to many risks of physical injury. On the orders of the Gang of Four, was labelled as a ''great traitor'' and subject to countless interrogations during his arrest.
Cao was imprisoned for six years up till his transferring to the Municipal May 7 Cadre School for labour in May of 1973 as a result of there being insufficient evidence for him to be labelled as a traitor. His imprisonment led to immense physical and mental damage dealt to his health.
Cao Diqiu died in Shanghai on 29th of March 1976 after almost a decade's worth of torment in the form of struggle sessions and character assassination.
On the 23rd of June 1978, with the approval of the CCP Central Committee, the CCP Shanghai Municipal Committee held a grand ceremony to rebury Cao's ashes, thoroughly rehabilitating him and restoring his political reputation. Cao's ashes were sent to Beijing by a special plane and placed in the Babaoshan Revolutionary Cemetery.
Preceded byKe Qingshi | Mayor of Shanghai | Succeeded byZhang Chunqiao |
Political leaders of Chongqing since 1949 | |
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Party committee secretaries | |
Congress chairpersons | |
Mayors | |
Conference chairpersons | |
Supervisory directors | |
* First office-holder after Chongqing became a direct-controlled municipality; ♀ female |
Political leaders of Shanghai since 1949 | |
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Party committee secretaries | |
Congress chairpersons | |
Mayors | |
Conference chairpersons | |
Supervisory directors |
References
- ^ "【人物】上海市第三任市长:曹荻秋". The Paper (in Chinese). Retrieved 2024-10-16.
- ^ Chen, Xiaojin. "China news digest". www.cnd.org. Retrieved 2024-11-12.
- 1909 births
- 1976 deaths
- 20th-century mayors of places in China
- People's Republic of China politicians from Sichuan
- Chinese Communist Party politicians from Sichuan
- Mayors of Shanghai
- Mayors of Chongqing
- Political office-holders in Chongqing
- Victims of the Cultural Revolution
- Politicians from Ziyang
- Sichuan University alumni
- People of the Cultural Revolution
- Inmates of Tilanqiao Prison