SEOUL, Nov 23, 2021 (BSS/AFP) - South Korean ex-dictator Chun Doo-hwan, who
brutally crushed opponents until mass demonstrations forced him out, died on
Tuesday, his longtime aide announced.
The former president died at his home in Seoul, Min Jeong-ki told
reporters outside the Chun residence. He was 90.
He oversaw the country's economic rise and secured the 1988 Olympics for
Seoul. He was the first South Korean president to hand over power peacefully.
A general in the South Korean military, Chun took power in a coup after
the 1979 assassination of strongman Park Chung-hee.
He was president from 1980 to 1988, ruling with an iron fist and brutally
crushing his opponents.
Chun remains among South Korea's most reviled figures.
He is known as the "Butcher of Gwangju" for ordering his troops to put
down an uprising against his rule in the southwestern city.
In 1996, he was convicted of treason and condemned to death, in part over
what happened at Gwangju, but his execution was commuted on appeal and he was
released following a presidential pardon.
The official toll for the dead or missing at Gwangju is around 200 people,
but activists say it may have been three times as high.
Chun and far-right politicians in South Korea dismissed it as a "riot".
The former dictator denied any direct involvement in the suppression of the
uprising.
During his rule, Chun also survived an assassination attempt.
On a state visit to Myanmar in 1983, North Korean agents tried to kill him
by bombing a memorial ceremony.
Chun had been mired in court battles even in his final years.
He was found guilty of defamation last year in connection with the Gwangju
uprising.