- Rangoon bombing
The 1983 Rangoon bombing was an
assassination attempt against then-South Korea n President,Chun Doo Hwan .cite news|url=http://www.irrawaddy.org/aviewer.asp?a=6977&z=163|last=Aung|first=Htet|publisher=The Irrawaddy|date=2007-04-23|accessdate=2007-04-27|title=Status of North Korean Terror Prisoner May Change]On
October 9 ,1983 , President Chun Doo Hwan was on an official visit to Rangoon (now calledYangon ), the capital ofBurma (now known asMyanmar too). During the visit, he planned to lay a wreath at the Martyr’s Mausoleum in that city, to commemorateAung San , who founded the independent Burma and was assassinated in1947 .cite news|url=http://english.yna.co.kr/Engnews/20060223/480100000020060223092719E9.html|date=2006-02-23|accessdate=2007-04-27|title=Calls rise for review of 1983 Rangoon bombing by North Korea|last=Kim|first=Hyung-jin]As some of the President’s staff began assembling at the Mausoleum, one of three bombs concealed in the roof of the memorial exploded. The huge blast ripped through the crowd below, killing 21 people and wounding 46. Among the dead were the Korean
foreign minister ,Lee Bum Suk , the economic planning minister and deputy prime minister,Suh Suk Joo , and the Minister forCommerce andIndustry ,Kim Dong Whie .Fact|date=April 2007 The rest of those killed were presidential advisers,journalist s, and security officials, most of them South Korean; however, four Burmese nationals were also among the dead. President Chun was saved because his car had been delayed in traffic and was just minutes from arriving at the memorial. The bomb was reportedly detonated early because the presidential bugle which signalled Chun's arrival mistakenly rang out a few minutes early.Police identified three suspects, an army major and two captains. One was shot to death two days after the bombing; Kang and another tried to commit suicide by hand-grenade that same day, but survived, although Kang lost an arm.
Kang Min-chul was the only one to confess his mission and his links to North Korea, an action by which he was able to avoid a death sentence and instead received life imprisonment; his colleague was executed by hanging. North Korea denied any links to Kang, who was sent to the infamous prison atInsein , north ofYangon .As of 2007 , Kang was Burma's longest-serving foreign prisoner; he had learned to speak theBurmese language fluently, according to one of his fellow prisoners. Yangon's moves towards resuming relations with North Korea led to speculation about what would happen to Kang; because North Korea denies that he is a citizen, he may be considered astateless person . Kang himself reportedly does not want to go either to North Korea, which he believes considers him a traitor, or to South Korea, which may try him for his role in the assassination attempt. In 2006, Chung Hyung-Keun, a member of South Korea'sGrand National Party and a former employee of South Korean intelligence, sponsored a bill to bring Kang to South Korea.In 1994 the representative of
South Korea to theUnited Nations General Assembly linked this incident with the downing ofKorean Air Flight 858 which he alleged was sponsored by the same government acting with impunity. [ UN document |docid=S-PV-3627 |body=Security Council |type=Verbotim Report |meeting=3627 |page=8 |anchor=pg008-bk02 |date=31 January 1996 |meetingtime=15:30 |speakername=Mr. Park | speakernation=Republic of Korea |accessdate=2007-09-25 ]ee also
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List of terrorist incidents
*List of Korea-related topics References
External links
* [http://www.onwar.com/aced/data/kilo/korea1983.htm Brief summary from Onwar.com]
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