The Borneo Post

Late Samsung chief laid to rest

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SEOUL: South Korea’s richest and most powerful industrial­ist, Lee Kun-hee, who turned Samsung Electronic­s into one of the world’s biggest tech companies, was buried yesterday following his death at the weekend.

Lee died at the age of 78 on Sunday, six years after being left bedridden by a heart attack.

Under his leadership, Samsung became the world’s largest producer of smartphone­s and memory chips, and the firm’s overall turnover today is equivalent to a fifth of South Korea’s gross domestic product.

It is by far the largest of the chaebols, the sprawling familycont­rolled conglomera­tes that dominate business in the country.

As well as his son and heir Lee Jae-yong, the Samsung Electronic­s vice-chairman, who has been the group’s de facto leader since his father was incapacita­ted, several chaebol chiefs gathered at the Samsung Medical Centre in Seoul, where the four-day funeral rites were held.

They included Lee’s sister Lee Myung-hee, who is chairwoman of the Shinsegae retail group, and nephew Lee Jae-hyun, who heads the entertainm­ent and food service conglomera­te CJ Group, according to reports, along with the chairman of the Hyundai Motor group, Chung Euisun.

“I have been to many countries in the world, but I have never seen a man like him who did better than his father,” a childhood friend said in a eulogy, according to reports.

Afterwards a stretch Lincoln hearse carrying his coffin and an LED light display reading “May the soul of the deceased rest in peace” emerged slowly and passed by around 100 reporters.

His eldest daughter Lee Boojin, the chief executive of Hotel Shilla, was seen sobbing on board a following bus.

The cortege passed by locations including Lee’s home and office in Seoul, and Samsung Electronic­s’ chip complex in Hwaseong, south of the capital, where employees stood holding chrysanthe­mums – a flower of mourning in Korean culture – to pay their respects.

“We will remember your footsteps forever,” read a banner hung at one entrance, Yonhap news agency reported, while some workers shed tears.

Samsung flags have been flying at half-mast on company buildings.

Lee was laid to rest at a family grave site in Suwon where the late patriarch’s grandparen­ts are buried. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? The hearse carrying the casket of the late Lee Kun-Hee leaves a funeral hall after his funeral ceremony at Samsung Medical Centre in Seoul.
— AFP photo The hearse carrying the casket of the late Lee Kun-Hee leaves a funeral hall after his funeral ceremony at Samsung Medical Centre in Seoul.

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