If there's one thing that
South Korean presidents dread more than the looming threat of rival North
Korea, it may be this: becoming an ex-president.
Associated
Press report continues:
Nearly
all former presidents, or their family members and key aides, have been
embroiled in scandals at the close of their terms or after leaving office.
There have been corruption allegations, coups — even a suicide and an
assassination.
Now,
South Korean prosecutors say they believe current President Park Geun-hye,
facing historic levels of unpopularity as she approaches her last year in
office, conspired in the criminal activities of a confidante who allegedly
exploited her presidential ties to force businesses to donate money to two
foundations she controlled.
Here's
a look at the troubles faced by South Korean presidents over the years:
___
SYNGMAN
RHEE (1948-1960)
A
U.S.-educated Christian leader who campaigned for Korean liberation from
Japanese colonial rule, Rhee became South Korea's founding president in 1948,
with help from Washington.
Rhee
staged vigorous campaigns to fight communism but later turned authoritarian
and, critics say, resorted to corruption and nepotism to cling to power. He won
his fourth presidential term in 1960 amid widespread allegations of
vote-rigging. Nationwide student demonstrations forced him to flee to Hawaii,
where he died in 1965.
___
PARK
CHUNG-HEE (1961-1979)
A
former Japanese colonial army lieutenant and primary school teacher, Maj. Gen.
Park took power in a coup in 1961, which ended a brief period of civilian rule
after Rhee resigned.
Park,
the father of the current president, was credited with laying the foundation
for South Korea's economic growth. But his critics point out that he also
arrested and tortured dissidents. He was assassinated by his spy chief during a
drinking party in 1979.
___
CHUN
DOO-HWAN (1980-1988)
Maj.
Gen. Chun and his military cronies rolled tanks and troops into Seoul to seize
power in a coup that ended the interim government of acting President Choi
Kyu-hah.
Chun
had himself elected president in a gymnasium filled with a pro-government
electorate. In 1987, massive pro-democracy demonstrations forced him to accept
a constitutional revision for direct presidential elections.
After
his tenure ended, Chun spent two years in exile in a remote Buddhist temple as
calls mounted to punish him for corruption and human rights abuses.
___
ROH
TAE-WOO (1988-1993)
Roh,
Chun's army buddy and hand-picked successor, won the 1987 election, thanks
largely to divided votes among opposition candidates. He presided over the 1988
Seoul Olympics.
In
1995, both Chun and Roh were arrested on charges of collecting hundreds of
millions of dollars from businessmen while in office. They were also indicted
on mutiny and treason charges stemming from Chun's coup and a bloody 1980
crackdown that killed hundreds of pro-democracy protesters in the southern city
of Gwangju.
Chun
was sentenced to death and Roh to 22 1/2 years in jail. They were pardoned in
December 1997.
___
KIM
YOUNG-SAM (1993-1998)
Kim's
election formally ended military rule. He arrested Chun and Roh and launched a
widely popular anti-corruption campaign.
His
mismanagement of the economy, however, helped precipitate the 1997-1998
financial crisis that toppled some of the country's debt-ridden conglomerates
and forced the government to accept a $58 billion bailout from the
International Monetary Fund.
He
left office amid rock-bottom popularity with his son arrested and jailed for
corruption.
___
KIM
DAE-JUNG (1998-2003)
Sentenced
to death by a military tribunal under Chun, Kim rose to the presidency and held
an unprecedented summit with North Korean leader Kim Jong Il in 2000; he was
awarded the Nobel Peace Prize that year.
He
left office tainted by corruption scandals involving aides and all three of his
sons and dubious cash remittances to North Korea shortly before his historic
inter-Korean summit.
___
ROH
MOO-HYUN (2003-2008)
Roh
committed suicide in 2009, a year after leaving the presidential Blue House,
amid allegations that his family members took $6 million in bribes from a
businessman during his presidency.
Roh's
older brother was sentenced in 2009 to two and a half years in prison for
influence-peddling during Roh's presidency. He was later pardoned.
Roh
was impeached in 2004 on allegations of incompetence and illegal
electioneering. But the impeachment triggered a strong public backlash that
helped his party win big in parliamentary elections. The Constitutional Court
then ruled that his actions did not warrant removal from office.
___
LEE
MYUNG-BAK (2008-2013)
Toward
the end of his term, Lee, who campaigned on an anti-corruption platform,
watched his only son and an elder brother come under fire for alleged
irregularities in funding Lee's retirement home.
Another
brother was arrested on separate allegations of taking bribes from bankers and
served a 14-month prison term.
Lee
called the corruption scandals involving family and aides
"heartbreaking."
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