Choi Kyu-Hah
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- Born:
- July 16, 1919, Wonju, Gangwon province, Korea [now in South Korea]
- Died:
- October 22, 2006, Seoul, South Korea
Choi Kyu-Hah (born July 16, 1919, Wonju, Gangwon province, Korea [now in South Korea]—died October 22, 2006, Seoul, South Korea) was a South Korean diplomat and politician who served briefly as the country’s president (1979–80) after the assassination of Pres. Park Chung-Hee on October 26, 1979.
Choi was educated in Seoul and at universities in Japan and Manchuria (now northeastern China). After two years as a professor at Seoul National University, Choi entered the foreign service, where he served as deputy minister of foreign affairs under Pres. Syngman Rhee. After Park came to power (1961), Choi faithfully supported his policies. Under Park he served as ambassador to Malaysia, as minister of foreign affairs, and then as special assistant to the president for foreign affairs. On December 19, 1975, Choi was named prime minister—essentially a ceremonial role under Park, whose rule had become increasingly authoritarian.
Choi became acting president upon Park’s death, and he won election in December 1979. He faced an unstable and dangerous situation in which popular demands for democracy collided with the ambitions of the politicized military elite, who attempted to reinstall military authoritarianism. Choi had never held any real power; a career diplomat, he had no political following and no power base in either the army or the country’s intelligence community. He made some attempts at political liberalization and gave amnesty to more than 680 political prisoners, but his liberalization efforts angered reactionaries among the military and yet went too slowly for students and liberal politicians. The initial popular enthusiasm for democracy after the assassination of Park, called the “Seoul Spring,” gave way to widespread riots and revolts. Political power quickly passed into the hands of the military under the leadership of Lieut. Gen. Chun Doo-Hwan, and Choi resigned the presidency on August 16, 1980.