According to the People's Post and Telegrade, Comrade Zhang Xiaotie, a member of the Communist Party of China and the headquarters of the headquarters of China Mobile Communications Group Co., Ltd., died at 9:39 on May 25, 2020 at 9:39 on May 25, 2020 at the age of 67.

According to the report, Comrade Zhang Xiaotie, born in November 1952, joined the work in February 1969, and joined the Communist Party of China in November 1973.He has successively served as the deputy director of the former Finance Department of the Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications, the deputy director and director of the former economic adjustment and communication department of the Ministry of Information Industry, the deputy general manager of the former China Network Communications Corporation and a member of the party group;Deputy General Manager, Member of the Party Group, Chairman of the Union of the Group Corporation; since June 2010, he has been an external director of the central enterprise since June 2010.

On the 26th, the listed company Dongfeng Group also issued an announcement: The board of directors depressed that the company's independent non -executive director Mr. Zhang Xiaotie, Mr. Zhang Xiaotie, died on May 25, 2020.

According to public resumes, Zhang Xiaotie was born in 1952, graduated from Tsinghua University in management engineering, obtained a master's degree in engineering, and joined the work in February 1969.

He worked at the former Ministry of Post and Telecommunications in the early days, and later transferred to the former president of China Netcom Group, the general manager of the planning of the plan to finance, and was promoted to the deputy general manager in 2003. He was the executive director of China Netcom Group (Hong Kong) Co., Ltd.

In May 2008, Zhang Xiaotie was transferred to the deputy general manager of China Mobile.

In June 2010, Zhang Xiaotie was transferred to China Mobile, served as an external director of China Electronics Information Industry Group Corporation, and a foreign director of the Hong Kong Travel and China Travelor. Since then, he retired in October 2013.