Gifted scholar becomes Party chief in Jinde
Updated: 2014-10-27 21:50
By Zhang Yi(Xinhua)
|
|||||||||||
A post-80s official has been appointed as Party chief of Jinde county in Xuancheng, Anhui province, and nominated as the candidate for the city's deputy mayor.
Zhou Mi, 32, is a native of Anhui province. His appointment attracted media attention, as he is one of the youngest officials at bureau-level in China.
Yan Cheng, head of the organization department of the city, said: "Zhou is intelligent and creative, and is able to work in different situations."
Zhou was enrolled in the special class for the gifted young at the China Science & Technology University at 15 and graduated as a science major. He was president of the student union and started his career as deputy head of the China Communist Youth League Chuzhou city committee.
He worked his way up to deputy secretary of the Communist Youth League in Anhui province in February 2011 before the new appointment.
Zhou has worked at different positions in the universities and government departments at provincial level as well as county level.
"He has accumulated sufficient leadership experience in different positions and is enthusiastic about work," Yan said.
Related Stories
Senior official in Shenzhen under graft probe 2014-10-24 19:41
Senior justice official probed in Hunan 2014-10-23 21:08
Senior insurance official under probe for bribery 2014-10-21 17:27
PBOC official gets ready 'to assume helm' at ABC 2014-10-21 07:09
Academic exchange between OECD official and DRC experts 2014-10-20 14:40
Today's Top News
Reductions considered for capital punishment
Ukrainian president's bloc launches talks for parliamentary coalition
Deal activity gets private push
China trainmakers CSR, CNR in talks to merge
Women desire better sex lives
Poroshenko's bloc leads parliamentary election
Occupy Central 'hatched 2 years ago'
Ukraine's early parliamentary election kicks off
Hot Topics
Lunar probe , China growth forecasts, Emission rules get tougher, China seen through 'colored lens', International board,
Editor's Picks
Growth pangs |
Sea change |
'Old newcomers' |
General aviation hub reaches for the sky |
Endangered species threatens livelihoods |
Chinese mavericks set to amaze racing world |