Los Angeles Times

Former South Korean president

- By Hyung-jin Kim Hyung-jin Kim writes for the Associated Press.

Former South Korean President Kim Young-sam, who formally ended decades of military rule and accepted a massive internatio­nal bailout during the 1997-98 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 was thought to have suffered from a severe blood infection and acute heart failure before he died.

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

Kim was an important figure in South Korea’s prodemocra­cy movement and opposed the country’s military dictators for decades. As president, he 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 Doohwan 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 money, though this was later 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 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 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. (That deal collapsed in 2002 when the United States accused North Korea of running a secret uranium-based program.)

During the ’94 crisis, Carter tried to arrange a summit between Kim and the North’s founder — in what would have been the first such meeting between the leaders of the two Koreas since the 1950-53 Korean War.

But the summit didn’t take place because the North’s Kim died of a heart attack in July 1994.

North Korea continued to cause security jitters for rival South Korea during Kim’s presidency. In 1996, a North Korean submarine ran aground off South Korea’s eastern shore.

The North later expressed its “deep regret” for the intrusion, which left 24 North Korean agents and 13 South Koreans dead. It was an unpreceden­ted apology from the North — though it said the sub drifted into southern waters while on a routine training exercise.

Kim was credited with disbanding a key military faction and bringing transparen­cy to the South’s murky financial system. But he was also accused of mismanagin­g the economy during the Asian financial crisis that toppled some of the country’s debt-ridden conglomera­tes and forced the government to accept a $58billion bailout from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

Kim was born into a rich fishing family on Dec. 20, 1927, in Geoge Island off the southeaste­rn tip of the Korean peninsula when the country was still under Japanese colonial rule. During the Korean War, he anchored a defense ministry propaganda radio program.

In 1954, Kim was elected as the youngest member of the National Assembly. At that time, he was a member of the ruling party of the late Syngman Rhee, South Korea’s first president.

But a few months later, he broke with the ruling party in protest over a constituti­onal revision and joined the opposition party, drawing anger from military rulers.

In 1979, Kim was expelled from the assembly, shortly before then-President Park Chung-hee — who seized power in a military coup in 1961 — was assassinat­ed by his intelligen­ce chief.

During that chaotic period, Maj. Gen. Chun Doohwan and his military cronies rolled tanks and troops into Seoul to seize power in another coup that ended an interim government.

In the early 1980s, Kim was placed under house arrest twice and staged a 23day hunger strike to protest political oppression.

He joined hands with military leader Roh Tae-woo and others to create a new ruling party.

In 1992, Kim became the head of the party and was elected president, five years after his first unsuccessf­ul presidenti­al bid.

Kim is survived by his wife, two sons and three daughters.

 ?? Dima Tanin AFP/Getty Images ?? PRO-DEMOCRACY LEADER Kim Young-sam led South Korea from 1993 to 1998, laying the foundation for a peaceful power transfer in a country that had been marked by military coups.
Dima Tanin AFP/Getty Images PRO-DEMOCRACY LEADER Kim Young-sam led South Korea from 1993 to 1998, laying the foundation for a peaceful power transfer in a country that had been marked by military coups.

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