求坐88路车回家百度网盘资源 发我yezhelong88 @ 1 6 3. com

我也在找麒麟1--6可以发给我吗。。谢谢了_百度知道
我也在找麒麟1--6可以发给我吗。。谢谢了
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相关资源已经发送到你的邮箱请及时下载附件,O(∩_∩)O~普通附件目标另存为即可下载,超大附件使用下载工具下载rar或zip格式的文件是txt的压缩包,点击右键解压就为txt格式的满意的话请及时采纳答案,O(∩_∩)O谢谢亲 可以收藏我发的邮件 邮件里有再次【求助通道】下次需要所求其他资源 直接求助即可PS:【附件在邮箱下面,请楼主仔细查看下载。】 如果文件下载下来不完整或是乱码的话,
这是系统的原因,你多下几次就行啦。
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谢谢,为我的书荒带来及时雨。非常感谢,祝龙年大吉。并再次由衷的送上我的谢意。
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我的位置:&>>>>>>欧美性爱视频撸狗网_校园乱淫_From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ling Jihua (: 令计划; born 22 October 1956) is a Chinese politician and one of the principal political advisers of , former President and . Between 2012 and 2014, he served as Vice Chairman of the National
(CPPCC) and the head of the
Central Committee.
Ling began his career as a functionary in regional branches of the
in his native
Province. His Youth League involvement propelled him to the national-level organization in 1979. At the Youth League Ling worked in its propaganda department and edited its flagship newspaper. Closely following the footsteps of his patron , Ling was promoted to a leadership position in the
in 1999, and became an important member of the .
Ling rose to become the Director of the General Office, an organ that handles day-to-day logistics and bureaucratic functions of the Communist Party, in 2007, when Hu was the party's . He was seen as a promising candidate for promotion to the top leadership at the
in 2012. However, his political fortunes abruptly took a turn when his 23-year-old son was killed while driving a Ferrari in 2012, an event that caused embarrassment for the party elite. Ling was then politically sidelined. In December 2014, Ling was placed under investigation by the
and removed from his position as head of the United Front Work Department of the party.
Born Linghu Jihua, Ling was the third son to Linghu Ye (令狐野), a party official, in , . He and all four of his siblings received names related to the Communist Party's policies. His own name, Jihua, means "planning". In December 1973, as with many other young Chinese, he was sent to work in the countryside as part of the . Ling worked in a printing factory. "" is a very rare surname, eventually most members of the Ling family shortened the "Linghu" to "Ling".
In June 1975, Ling was admitted into the
(CYL) organization in Pinglu County, and was soon elevated to deputy secretary of the local CYL committee. He joined the Communist Party of China in June 1976. In December 1978, Ling was transferred to Communist Party's
Committee in Shanxi. In 1979, Communist Youth League's central organization selected young cadres nationwide to work in the capital. Ling, at the age of 23, was recruited to work in the propaganda department of CYL Central Committee.
From August 1983, Ling studied at China Youth Political Academy, affiliated to CYL, majoring in political education. In July 1985, Ling worked in the political theory section of the propaganda department of CYL. At that time,
was the First Secretary (i.e., leader), of the Youth League. From June 1988, Ling served in various posts in CYL, mostly as part of the CYL Secretariat and the CYL . He also served as editor-in-chief of Chinese Communist Youth League, the primary theory publication of the CYL, and between 1994 and 1995, the CYL's chief of propaganda.
In December 1995, after serving in CYL for over ten years, Ling was transferred to , and continued his work in political theory. Between 1994 and 1996 Ling obtained an "on-job master's degree" in commercial management at . In June 1998, he was promoted to head of research office of the General Office (中央办公厅调研室主任). In December 1999, Ling was appointed as deputy director of General Office. Later, he also served as the deputy chief of the
in charge of the , and chief of staff of the Office of General Secretary Hu Jintao.
On September 19, 2007 Ling was promoted to become Director of , the nerve center of the party that was in charge of all manner of administrative activities of the party's central authorities, including communications and leaders' scheduling and agendas. He also became a Secretary of the Central Secretariat, in charge of the implementation of tasks set forth by the party's Politburo.
Throughout Hu Jintao's presidency, Ling accompanied Hu on trips abroad and was often seen with Hu on inspection visits around the country. As one of Hu Jintao's closest associates and most trusted advisors, in addition to being of an appropriate level of seniority, Ling seemed long destined for higher office. Ling's political fortunes, however, took an abrupt turn in 2012. On March 18, Ling's only son, then 23-Year old Ling Gu, was involved and killed in a car crash on Beijing's
while driving a black
accompanied by two women, reportedly of minority ethnic background, who survived. Ling Gu was said to have been found naked, and the women were described as either naked or otherwise "scantily clad," which seemed to suggest sexual activity while driving. While this account was later disputed, the widely-discussed "Ferrari crash" was juicy tabloid fodder and exacerbated public cynicism over the debauchery and
often associated with children of the Communist ruling elite.
News of the crash was reported in mainland Chinese media shortly after it happened, but the story was then rapidly suppressed. Reportedly, Ling Jihua, after viewing the body of the driver at the morgue, denied it was his son. Ling was also said to have mobilized staff from the , an organ in charge of national leaders' security which reported into the General Office, to cover up the crash. Chinese media also reported that Ling had contacted , then chief of the powerful , to reach unspecified "political deals" in exchange for assistance on covering up the death of his son. Ling then went on to work as normal. In China, Internet search terms such as "Ferrari", "Little Ling" and "Prince Ling" were blocked. In November 2012, an 'exclusive' from the
reported that , a former associate of Zhou Yongkang then serving as chief executive of , wired money from the company's accounts to the families of the two women involved in the crash to
about the crash.
Despite media censorship regarding the event, news of the crash was widely circulated in China. The incident was also later reported on major international media, including the
and . Online Chinese-language communities also questioned how Ling Gu could afford a car worth some $500,000 when his parents had government jobs. The crash and subsequent suppression was said to have led to Ling Jihua's demotion in August 2012, and his wife Gu Liping's removal from her job in January 2013.
On September 1, 2012, prior to the transfer of power between Hu Jintao and
at the pivotal , Ling was abruptly transferred from his position as General Office chief to become head of the , an organ considered to be of less importance. This was seen as a demotion for Ling. At the 18th Party Congress held in the fall of 2012, Ling did not gain a seat on the Politburo as expected, nor did he retain his position as Secretary of the Secretariat. In March 2013, Ling was elected as one of the Vice-Chairmen of the
(CPPCC), barely holding onto his status as a "national leader". In addition, of the 23 candidates standing for confirmation for the CPPCC Vice-Chairmanship, Ling received, by far, the least votes in favour. A total of 90 CPPCC delegates voted against Ling, while 22 delegates abstained.
In the latter half of 2014, members of the Ling family were successively detained by the authorities (see "Family" section below). Moreover, a unprecedented number of high-ranking officials in Ling's native
province were investigated for corruption and removed from office. Rumours circulated about Ling's own fate. Ling was officially placed under investigation by the
on December 22, 2014, and dismissed from his position as United Front Work Department head about a week later. The CPPCC then removed him from the office of Vice-Chairman in February 2015, in addition to stripping him of his ordinary CPPCC delegate status.
Several weeks prior to the announcement of the investigation, Ling continued to make appearances on state television in his positions of CPPCC Vice Chairman and United Front chief. On December 15 Ling had penned an article on the Communist theory publication
brimming with praise for the signature political philosophies of Xi Jinping such as the "". This was seen by observers as a 'last-ditch' declaration of fealty to the new Chinese leader with whom Ling was thought to have lost favour.
Ling was one of the highest-profile targets (next to
and ) of the anti-corruption campaign following the 18th Party Congress spearheaded by Xi Jinping and central discipline chief . He was the second sitting "national leader"-level figure to be investigated by the party's anti-graft agency, after CPPCC Vice-Chairman . Chinese-language media have linked Ling to a mysterious political network composed of prominent politicians and businesspeople with origins in Shanxi called the .
Ling was an alternate member of , a full member of
Central Committees, and a member of the 17th . Ling likely faces expulsion from the 18th Central Committee at the Fifth Plenary Session to be held in the fall of 2015.
An image of Ling Gu's fatal crash which widely circulated on the Chinese internet.
Ling is married to Gu Liping (谷丽萍), Director General of
program that aims to promote youth
that is headquartered in Beijing. In 2010 she was deputy director of the Ying Public Interest Foundation, a charity sponsored by the . In that role she reportedly solicited donations for the foundation. Gu was thought to be placed in custody prior to the initiation of the investigation on Ling Jihua.
Ling and Gu had one son, Ling Gu (令谷), born c. 1989, alias Wang Ziyun (王子云), who majored in international relations at . Ling Gu died in March 2012 at the age of 23 in the aforementioned Ferrari crash.
Ling had three brothers and one sister. His eldest brother, Ling Fangzhen (令方针), was in the military, and died after a fall while cleaning windows in 1977. Ling's second eldest brother, , was a provincial-level politician in
Province. Zhengce was placed under investigation by the Communist Party's anti-graft agency in June 2014. His sister, Linghu Luxian (令狐路线), was a hospital executive in the city of , and was married to the city's Vice-Mayor Wang Jiankang (王健康); the couple disappeared from public view for several months in 2014, suspected of being placed under investigation, but re-appeared later on. Ling's younger brother
was a businessman and golf enthusiast, who was also detained by the authorities for investigation in November 2014.
Mosettig, Michael D. (November 7, 2012). . PBS NewsHour 2012.
(in Chinese). . .
Staff Reporters (November 14, 2012). . South China Morning Post.
Hall, John (September 5, 2012). . London: Independent 2012.
. Duowei News.
. BBC News. March 20, 2012.
(January 5, 2013).
(OPINION). The New York Times 2013. Ling feared a scandal and reportedly began a cover-up. He went to the morgue, according to the account I got from one Chinese official, and looked at the body — and then coldly denied that it was his son. He continued to work in the following weeks as if nothing had happened.
. The Wall Street Journal. October 22, 2012.
. Duowei. December 22, 2014.
. Los Angeles Times. September 3, 2012.
. The Asahi Shimbun. March 5, .
Wang, Jinbo. . China in perspective.
It should be noted that the candidate with the second most votes in opposition was , who received 27 votes against.
. Ifeng. February 28, 2015.
Wang, Ya (December 24, 2014). . Duowei News.
Party political offices
Preceded by
Head of the
2012 – 2014
Succeeded by
Preceded by
Director of the
2007 – 2012
Succeeded by
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