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Kim Young-sam

 

(born Dec. 20, 1927, Koje Island [near Pusan], Korea) South Korean moderate opposition leader who served as president (1993 – 98) after his party merged with the ruling party. First elected to South Korea's National Assembly in 1954, he served there until his expulsion in 1979 by Pres. Park Chung Hee, which touched off riots and demonstrations that preceded Park's assassination. After the military takeover by Gen. Chun Doo Hwan in 1980, Kim was put under house arrest until 1983. In 1990 he merged his party with the ruling Democratic Justice Party, a move that helped him win the presidency in 1992. He enacted reforms to end political corruption, and his term was one of rising prosperity for Korea until 1997, when Korea became caught up in an Asian financial crisis.

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Biography: Kim Young Sam
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The South Korean statesman Kim Young Sam (born 1927) was a centrist and pragmatic opposition party leader. In 1990 he led his party into a merger with the ruling Democratic Justice Party. He was elected president of South Korea in December 1992.

Kim Young Sam was born in the southern island of Koje near Pusan in South Korea on December 10, 1927. He was first elected to the National Assembly in 1954 and was reelected seven times from his district in Pusan. He became the opposition party floor leader and subsequently party president in 1974 and 1979. For his opposition to the military rule during the Park Chung Hee era, Kim was briefly imprisoned in 1962. He was also prosecuted for his vocal criticism of the Korean CIA activities.

As a veteran opposition leader in the National Assembly, Kim was instrumental in bringing down the Yushin system of President Park in 1979. Throughout the 1970s Kim Young Sam campaigned the cause of resisting Park's authoritarian rule and restoring democracy for Korea. For his activism, Kim was expelled from the National Assembly on October 4, 1979, thereby triggering widespread riots in the southeastern cities of Pusan and Masan. This crisis of domestic unrest provided the impetus to and context for Park's subsequent assassination three weeks later by one of his own trusted aides, Kim Jae Kyu. The Fourth Republic collapsed with the assassination.

Kim was banned from political activities following the bloody Kwangju uprising of May 1980, which was suppressed by the military government of General Chun Doo Hwan. When he was placed under house arrest for two years, 1981 to 1983, Kim went on a 23-day hunger strike from May 18 to June 9, 1983. This attracted both sympathy and support from home and abroad, making Kim Young Sam one of Korea's most celebrated dissident politicians.

As the opposition party leader, Kim acted skillfully to overcome the June 1987 political crisis of violent clashes between students and riot-controlling police. He made a deal with the ruling party leader, Roh Tae Woo, to carry out democratic reforms. These included the constitutional amendment to conduct direct presidential election and to restore democratic freedom and rights of the people. Under this arrangement Kim Dae Jung was also released from a house arrest and his civil rights were restored, enabling him to participate in the electoral process.

Prior to the December 17, 1987, election, Kim was widely perceived as the only safe nonmilitary candidate acceptable to the public at large. However, the split in the opposition camp and his long-standing rivalry with Kim Dae Jung enabled the ruling party candidate, Roh Tae Woo, to win the presidency of South Korea's Sixth Republic. Whereas Roh received a plurality vote of only 36.6 percent, the two Kims together garnered a total of 55 percent of the total, Kim Young Sam receiving 28 percent and Kim Dae Jung 27 percent. As he failed in the presidential bid, Kim resigned from the presidency of his Reunification Democracy Party only to be reinstated in January 1988. In the April 1988 National Assembly election his party failed to attract broad electoral support other than from his own native province in the southeast, thereby losing the first opposition party status in the National Assembly to Kim Dae Jung's party, the Party for Peace and Democracy.

Kim was sometimes regarded as lacking charisma, unlike his rival Kim Dae Jung, and also lacking a firm grasp on some important issues, such as on national security and foreign policy. Although championing the cause of democracy, he has often been criticized by the hardliners as too moderate and sometimes even cozy with the government. He is regarded as a back-room dealmaker politician who has built his reputation on his savvy regarding inside politics.

In July 1989 Kim spent nine days in the Soviet Union, nominally at the invitation of Evegeny Primakov, who was then head of the Institute of World Economy and International Relations of the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences and subsequently a special adviser to Mikhail Gorbachev on Far Eastern Affairs. While in Moscow, he also met with North Korean ex-Foreign Minister Ho Dam, ostensibly to discuss the issue of Korea's reunification.

Kim Young Sam surprised the world by announcing in January 1990 that his Reunification Democracy Party would join President Roh Tae Woo's ruling Democratic Justice Party and one other opposition party, Kim Jong Pil's New Democratic Republican Party, to create a new conservative majority party in the National Assembly. This new ruling party, under the name of the Democratic Liberal Party, would resemble Japan's Liberal Democratic Party in terms of providing stability for the conservative ruling coalition in National Assembly. In his capacity as one of the three party chairmen, Kim led a delegation to Moscow in March 1990, ostensibly to negotiate an agreement with the Soviet Union to upgrade Seoul's trade liaison office into the more expanded consulate general's office in Moscow.

Kim was elected president of South Korea in the December 18, 1992 elections. He was formally installed as president in February 1993. At his inauguration, Kim promptly blamed his predecessors for the country's problems, stating "misconduct and corruption are the most terrifying enemies attacking the foundations of our society." (Time, March 8, 1993, p. 19). In March of that same year, he formed a new cabinet, naming former dissidents and women to posts. He continued to follow through on his anti-corruption campaign, as more than 1,000 bureaucrats and politicians were fired or forced to resign by mid-1993.

South Koreans quickly realized that they did not get the president they elected, with many believing Kim was "too radical for the country's good." (The Economist, September 11, 1993). On December 21, 1993, Kim again "shook things up," as he replaced 14 of 24 cabinet ministers. By 1996, public disfavor with Kim affected the outcome of the National Assembly elections.

By law, Kim cannot succeed himself when his five-year presidential term ends in late 1997. Kim planned to keep some form and power and work behind the scenes in South Korean government. But as the scandals surfaced in mid-1997, including Kim's son Kim Hyun Chul being arrested and charged with tax evasion, Kim's future in South Korean government was doubtful. The president who had promised to investigate and address political corruption, now found himself implicated for the very same crimes.

Further Reading

Additional information on Kim Young Sam can be found in Ilpyong J. Kim and Young Whan Kihl, editors, Political Change in South Korea (1988).

Other information on Kim Young Sam can be found in Far Eastern Economic Review (January 7, 1993; March 11, 1993; and December 30, 1993); U.S. News & World Report (July 12, 1993 and January 27, 1997); The Economist (April 5, 1997 and May 24, 1997); and World Press Review (July 1997).

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Kim Young Sam
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Kim Young Sam, 1927-, South Korean political leader, b. Gyeongsang prov. He was first elected to the National Assembly in 1954 and served nine terms. A long-time political dissident and opponent of military rule, he was banned from politics from 1980 to 1985 and was twice subjected to house arrest. Kim was an unsuccessful presidential candidate in 1987, but after three decades in opposition he shrewdly merged his party with the ruling party in 1990 to form the Democratic Liberal party (now the New Korea party). In 1993 he became the first nonmilitary president in more than 30 years, and initiated political and economic reforms, but in 1998, amid corruption scandals and public loss of confidence, he was succeeded by his rival Kim Dae Jung.
Wikipedia: Kim Young-sam
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This is a Korean name; the family name is Kim.
Kim Young-sam
김영삼
金泳三


In office
25 February 1993 – 25 February 1998
Prime Minister Hwang In Sung
Lee Hoi Chang
Lee Yung Duk
Lee Hong Koo
Lee Soo Sung
Goh Kun
Preceded by Roh Tae-woo
Succeeded by Kim Dae-jung

Born December 20, 1927 (1927-12-20) (age 82)
Geoje, South Gyeongsang, Japanese Korea
Nationality South Korean
Political party Grand National (1997-present)
Democratic Liberal (1990-1997)
Democratic Reunification (1987-1990)
New Korean Democratic (1985-1987)
Democratic Korea (1981-1985)
New Democracy (1954-1981)
Spouse(s) Son Myeong-sun
Religion Presbyterianism
Korean name
Hangul 김영삼
Hanja 金泳三
Revised Romanization Gim Yeong-sam
McCune–Reischauer Kim Yŏngsam
Pen name
Hangul 거산
Hanja 巨山
Revised Romanization Geosan
McCune–Reischauer Kŏsan

Kim Young-sam (b. 20 December 1927 in Geoje, South Gyeongsang) was the first civilian President of South Korea since a series of dictatorships beginning with Park Chung-hee. Kim Young-sam was inaugurated on 25 February 1993 and served a single 5-year term. He presided over a massive anti-corruption campaign, the arrest of his two predecessors, and an internationalization policy called Segyehwa.

Contents

Life

Kim graduated from Seoul National University in 1952 with a B.A. in Philosophy, and served in the South Korean armed forces during the Korean War. In 1954 he was elected to the National Assembly of South Korea and served nine terms representing districts in Geoje and Busan. He was the youngest ever to serve in the National Assembly.[citation needed]

He resigned his National Assembly seat when Syngman Rhee attempted to amend the constitution of South Korea and became a leading critic, with Kim Dae-jung, of the military governments of Park Chung-hee and Chun Doo-hwan. He was expelled from the National Assembly for his democratic activities and banned from politics from 1980 to 1985. In 1983, he undertook a 21-day hunger strike protesting the dictatorship of Chun Doo-hwan.

When the first democratic presidential election was held in 1987 after Chun's retirement, Kim Young-sam and Kim Dae-jung ran against each other, splitting the opposition vote and enabling ex-general Roh Tae-woo, Chun's hand-picked successor, to win the election. In 1990, he unexpectedly merged his Peaceful Democracy Party with Roh's ruling D.J.P. (Democratic Justice Party). As the candidate of the center, he defeated Kim Dae-jung in the 18 December 1992 presidential election. He was only the third civilian to hold the office, and the first since 1960.

The Kim Young-sam administration attempted to reform the government and economy. One of the first acts of his government was to start an anti-corruption campaign, requiring government and military officials to publish their financial records, precipitating the resignation of several high-ranking officers and cabinet members. He had Chun and Roh arrested on charges of corruption and treason, winning convictions against both. Kim also granted amnesty to thousands of political prisoners, and removed the criminal convictions of pro-democracy protesters who had been arrested during the Gwangju massacre in the aftermath of the Coup d'état of December Twelfth (which is now officially described as a mutiny).

The anti-corruption campaign was also part of an attempt to reform the chaebol, the large South Korean conglomerates which dominated the economy. However, implication of corruption on the part of his second son, led to a loss of confidence; his new ministerial party, the DLP lost its narrow majority in the National Assembly in 1996. Kia Motors collapsed soon thereafter, setting off a chain of events which embroiled South Korea in the 1997 Asian Financial Crisis during the last year of his presidency. (South Korean presidents are limited to a single 5-year term according to the 1987 Constitution of the Republic of Korea.)

After his presidency, Kim promoted democracy throughout the world, speaking at events such as "Towards a Global Forum on New Democracies" in Taiwan in January 2007.

Personal life

Kim is a member of the Chunghyun Presbyterian Church [1] and is fluent in Japanese.[citation needed]

See also

References

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
Roh Tae-woo
President of South Korea
1993-1998
Succeeded by
Kim Dae-jung

 
 

 

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