Houston Chronicle Sunday

Ex-South Korean President Kim Young-sam dies at 87

- By Hyung-jin Kim

SEOUL, South Korea — Former President Kim Young-sam, who formally ended decades of military rule in South Korea and accepted a massive internatio­nal bailout during the 1997-1998 Asian financial crisis, died Sunday. He was 87.

The chief of Seoul National University Hospital, Oh Byung-Hee, told a televised briefing that Kim died there early Sunday. He said Kim is believed to have suffered from a severe blood infection and acute heart failure before he died.

Kim was taken to the hospital on Thursday due to a high fever, Oh said. In recent years, Kim had been treated at the hospital for stroke, angina and pneumonia, Oh added.

Kim was an important figure in South Korea’s prodemocra­cy movement and opposed the country’s military dictators for decades. As president, Kim laid the foundation for a peaceful power transfer in a country that had been marked by military coups.

During his presidency from 1993-1998, he had his two predecesso­rs indicted on mutiny and treason charges stemming from a coup. Still, Kim pardoned the two convicted military strongmen — Chun Doo-hwan and Roh Tae-woo — at the end of his term.

Kim also launched a popular anti-corruption campaign and vowed not to receive any political slush funds, though this was lat- er tarnished when his son was arrested on charges of bribery and tax evasion.

He led South Korea in 1994 when the Clinton administra­tion was considerin­g attacking Nyongbyon — home to North Korea’s nuclear complex — north of communist North Korea’s capital, Pyongyang. Kim lobbied against the idea, fearing a possible war.

A U.S. aircraft carrier and a cruiser had been deployed near South Korea’s east coast in preparatio­n for a possible airstrike, and the United States planned to evacuate Americans, including its soldiers and their families, Kim said in a memoir.

A U.S. airstrike “will immediatel­y prompt North Korea to open fire against major South Korean cities from the border,” Kim said in his memoir, describing his dawn telephone conversati­on with President Bill Clinton in June 1994.

The crisis eased when former President Jimmy Carter met with the North’s leader and founder Kim Il Sung, the grandfathe­r of current ruler Kim Jong Un, in Pyongyang, which led to an accord aimed at freezing North Korea’s plutoniumb­ased nuclear programs.

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