• Source: Guangzhou Military Region
    • The Guangzhou Military Region was from 1955 to 2016 one of the People's Liberation Army PLA Military Regions, located in the south of the People's Republic of China. In May 1949, the Central China (Hua Zhong) Military Region (MR) was formed. In March 1955, it was divided into two, the Guangzhou MR and the Wuhan Military Region. When the Wuhan MR was disbanded in August 1985, its troops stationed around the Hubei province were assigned to the Guangzhou MR.
      The region was disestablished in 2016 and reorganised as the Southern Theater Command.
      Just before being disbanded, the Guangzhou MR controlled the Guangdong Province, Guangxi Autonomous Region, Hunan Province, Hubei Province, and the Hainan Province Military Districts. The Hong Kong and Macau garrisons were within the Guangzhou MR area but reported directly to the Central Military Commission.
      There were two Group Armies within the Region, the 41st Group Army and 42nd Group Army, and in 2006 the International Institute for Strategic Studies said the region had some 180,000 personnel, one mechanised division, three motorised infantry divisions, one artillery division, two armoured brigades, one artillery brigade, and two anti-aircraft brigades. The 123rd (Amphibious) Infantry Division (53023) at Guigang/Guangxi and 124th Infantry Divisions at Boluo, Guangdong had been identified as Rapid Reaction Units. The Hong Kong garrison includes a brigade with a helicopter unit.
      The PLA's 15th Airborne Corps was also located in this MR though not under its command.


      List of commanders



      Huang Yongsheng, 1955−68
      Li Tianyou
      Ding Sheng
      Xu Shiyou, 1973−80
      Wu Kehua, 1980−82
      You Taizhong, 1982−87
      Zhang Wannian
      Liu Cunzhi
      Zhu Dunfa
      Li Xilin
      Tao Bojun
      Liu Zhenwu
      Zhang Qinsheng, 2007−09
      Xu Fenlin, 2009−present


      Ground Forces



      41st Group Army (Command Center:Liuzhou) consists of 2 divisions and 3 brigades
      121st Mechanized Infantry Division(Liuzhou)
      123rd Mechanized Infantry Division(Guigang)
      Armored Brigade(Guilin)
      Anti-Aircraft Brigade (Hengyang)
      Artillery Brigade(Liuzhou)
      42nd Group Army (Command Center:Huizhou) consists of 2 divisions and 4 brigades
      124th Amphibious Mechanized Infantry Division (Boluo)
      163rd Mechanized Infantry Division(Chaozhou)
      Anti-Aircraft Brigade (Jieyang)
      Special Operation Battalion(Guangzhou)
      Electronic Warfare Regiment(Huadu)
      6th Regiment of the Army Aviation(Sanshui)
      Engineering Regiment(Huizhou)
      Anti-Chemical Warfare Regiment(Shenzhen)
      Driver and Medic Training Battalion(Dongguan)
      Training Regiment(Huizhou)


      Air Force


      Commander:Lt. Gen. Han Ruijie
      Political Officer: Lt. Gen. Wang Jilian
      Deputy Commander:Maj. Gen. Zhang Shutian
      In June 1962, the second Shantou Command Post became the 7th Air Corps. After a move to Xingning in Guangdong Province, it moved to Nanning, Guangxi Autonomous Region, in August 1964.
      The 48th Aviation Division was active, initially under the 12th Air Corps, from 1971 to 1992.

      7th Air Corps
      2nd Fighter Division: Suixi, Liuzhou Su-27, J-7
      9th (Fighter) Division : Foshan, Shaoguan, Guangzhou, Xingning J-8D, J-7B, J-10
      42nd (Fighter) Division : Nanning, Ningming, Guilin J-10
      Air Force in Wuhan Base
      13th (Transport) Division : Wangjiadun AirportHankou, Dangyang, Kaifeng Y-7, Y-8, IL-76
      18 (Fighter) Division : Changsha, Hengyang J-8D, J-7, Su-30
      8th (Bomber) Division : Leiyang, Qidong H-6, H-6U
      15th Airborne Corps
      43rd Airborne Division:Kaifeng, Henan
      44th Airborne Division Guangshui, Hubei
      45th Airborne Division Huangpi, Hubei


      Nickname


      Organizations affiliated with the Guangzhou Military Region often used the nickname "warrior" (Chinese: 战士; pinyin: zhànshì; lit. 'battle person'), including the Warrior Performance Troupe (Chinese: 战士文工团) and the Warrior Newspaper (Chinese: 战士报).


      References




      = Citations

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      = Sources

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