Qin Guangrong

Qin Guangrong
秦光荣
Qin Guangrong
Vice Chairperson of National People's Congress Supervisory and Judicial Affairs Committee
In office
12th National People's Congress
In office
November 2014 – March 2018
ChairpersonMa Wen
Party Secretary of Yunnan
In office
August 2011 – October 2014
Preceded byBai Enpei
Succeeded byLi Jiheng
Chairman of the Standing Committee of the Yunnan People's Congress
In office
11th Yunnan People's Congress
In office
February 2012 – November 2014
Preceded byBai Enpei
Succeeded byLi Jiheng
Governor of Yunnan
In office
July 2007 – August 2011
Preceded byXu Rongkai
Succeeded byLi Jiheng
Executive Vice Governor of Yunnan
In office
January 2003 – July 2007
Preceded byNiu Shaoyao
Succeeded byLuo Zhengfu
Head of Organization Department of Yunnan Provincial Committee of the Chinese Communist Party
In office
March 2001 – February 2003
Preceded byMeng Jiyao
Succeeded byLi Jiang
Secretary of the Political Law Committee of the Yunnan Provincial Committee of the Chinese Communist Party
In office
January 1999 – March 2001
Preceded byJiang Xingchang
Succeeded byLi Mingzhao
Party Secretary of Changsha
In office
June 1993 – February 1998
Preceded byXia Zanzhong
Succeeded byYang Baohua
Personal details
Born (1950-12-25) 25 December 1950
PartyChinese Communist Party (1972-2019, expelled)
SpouseHuang Yulan
Children1
Alma materHengyang Normal University
Chinese name
Traditional Chinese
Simplified Chinese
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinQín Guāngróng

Qin Guangrong (Chinese: 秦光荣; pinyin: Qín Guāngróng; born 25 December 1950) is a Chinese former politician. He served as the Governor of Yunnan from 2007 to 2011, when he became the Party Secretary of Yunnan, Yunnan's top political office, until October 2014. He last served as deputy chair of the committee on internal legal affairs of the National People's Congress, from 2014 to 2018. He is the first leader of provincial level to spontaneously hand himself in to the anti-corruption agency of China.

His son, Qin Ling, was a former chairman of Huarong Investment Stock Corp and came under investigation as part of the corruption scandal at the Huarong Asset Management Co. Ltd., one of China's four state-run bad-asset disposal companies.