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China dismisses Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Sun Weidong

play Live Sign upShow navigation menuplay Live Click here to searchsearchSign upNews|Xi JinpingChina dismisses Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Sun WeidongVice Foreign Minister Sun Weidong’s sudden dismissal comes amid a wave of removals amid anticorruption campaign.

xwhatsapp-strokecopylinkgoogleAdd Al Jazeera on GoogleinfoChina's Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Sun Weidong in Tokyo, Japan in 2023 [File: Issei Kato/Pool via Reuters]By Erin HalePublished On 14 Apr 202614 Apr 2026Senior Chinese diplomat Sun Weidong has been dismissed from his post as vice minister of foreign affairs, in the latest case of a high-ranking official being removed from office by Beijing.

The Ministry of Human Resources announced the news in a brief post on its website on Tuesday, citing a decision of the State Council, the highest body of state power in China.

The post did not say why or when Sun had been dismissed, but the Ministry of Foreign Affairs website shows his last public engagements were meetings with the ambassadors of Brunei and Malaysia to China on March 13.

Two days earlier, Sun had met Pakistan’s ambassador to China to discuss bilateral cooperation, according to a post on diplomat Khalil Hashmi’s X account.

Dismissals of this kind in the Chinese government usually indicate high-level disciplinary action and are often followed by news of an investigation.

Sun’s dismissal notice included the removal of another official, An Lusheng, from his post as deputy director of the National Railway Administration.

Since coming to power in 2012, President Xi Jinping has carried out a wide-ranging anticorruption campaign targeting “tigers and flies”, meaning high- and low-ranking officials.

Last year, China investigated more than one million corruption cases and disciplined 938,000 people, according to its Central Commission for Discipline Inspection and National Supervisory Commission.

The list of cases involving disciplinary action included 69 provincial or ministerial-level officials, 4,155 bureau-level officials, 35,000 county-level officials, and 125,000 township-level officials, according to the commission’s year-end report.

Senior Chinese military officials have also been caught up in Xi’s anticorruption campaign sweeps.

Read original at Al Jazeera English

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