Fu Ying

For the HK singer, see Theresa Fu.
Fu Ying
People's Republic of China Ambassador to United Kingdom
In office
March 2007  February 2010
Preceded by Zha Peixin
Succeeded by Liu Xiaoming
Personal details
Born January 1953 (1953-01) (age 63)
Hohhot, Inner Mongolia
Fu Ying
Traditional Chinese 傅瑩
Simplified Chinese 傅莹
This is a Chinese name; the family name is Fu.

Fu Ying (born January 1953 in Hohhot, Inner Mongolia; ethnic Mongol) is the current vice minister of the Foreign Ministry of the People's Republic of China.[1]

She is the first woman to serve in the role since 1979, and one of only two to serve in Chinese history. Fu graduated from the Beijing Foreign Studies University. In 1976, she became the official interpreter of the diplomatic service.

She led the Chinese Delegation during talks with North Korea that led to the latter country’s decision (later reneged on) to abandon nuclear weapons.[2] From 2004 to 2007 she was the ambassador to Australia. She was the Chinese ambassador to the United Kingdom from March 2007 to 2009. In February 2010 she was recalled as ambassador to the UK and replaced by Liu Xiaoming.

Currently she is Vice Foreign Minister of PRC.[3]

A column in the Straits Times described her as "apparatchik known for hardline positions".[4]

Early life

Fu was born in the Inner Mongolia Autonomous Region of China in 1953.

Education

She graduated from the Beijing Foreign Studies University.

Career

Literary compositions

"If the West can Listen to China"

Personal life

Fu Ying tries to adhere to elements of traditional Inner Mongolian culture in her personal life. She drinks suutei tsai (奶茶, Hohhot-style milk tea) on the weekends, listens to the traditional Mongol long song, and eats Inner Mongolian food.[6] She has one daughter by her husband, ethnologist Hao Shiyuan (郝时远).[7]

References

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