Kim du-han death
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Kim Du-han
Este nombre sigue la onomástica coreana; el apellido es Kim.
Kim Du-han (Hangul:김두한; 15 de mayo de 1918-21 de noviembre de 1972),[1] también escrito como Kim Doo-han, fue un líder matón coreano, activista de derecha, político e hijo de Kim Chwa-chin.
Biografía
[editar]Hijo del general Baekya (Kim Chwa-chin), quien fue un influyente líder independentista durante la ocupación japonesa en Corea, Kim Du-han tuvo una historia personal y política compleja. Durante la época de la ocupación japonesa, lideró una banda de gánsters en Seúl y ejerció un control significativo sobre la comunidad criminal.
Después de la liberación de Corea en 1945, Kim Du-han inicialmente se involucró con la Juventud Vanguardista de Corea bajo el dominio militar estadounidense, pero pronto se retiró y se convirtió en un activista de derecha. Participó en movimientos anticomunistas y estuvo involucrado en actos de terrorismo político. Durante la Guerra de Corea, continuó sus actividades criminales en la ciudad de Busan.
Kim Du-han también incursionó en la política, sirviendo
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Documents on Kim Du-han's imprisonment are discovered
Korean News
© Inho Shin |
On November 3rd, Yongsan Ward Office in Seoul announced that it had discovered official documents of the Military Commission Order #2, #3, and #5 written by the United States Military Court in 1948. The documents officially prove that the political activist Kim Du-han was imprisoned in the 7th Division of the US Army, which was deployed in Yongsan at the time.
Among the three documents discovered, the Order #3 states that "the 7th Infantry Division Stockade, Seoul, Korea, is designated as the place of confinement." It is then affirmed as the "command of Lieutenant General Hodge." Besides, the Order #5 notes that "the execution [of Kim Du-han] will be withheld pending the confirmation of the action by the Commander-in-Chief, Far East."
The official documents were discovered by Kim Cheon-su, Head of History and Culture Research Department of Yongsan Cultural Center. The Digital Resource Library of the National Institute of Korean History was wher
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Kim Du-han Edit Profile
autobiographer
Kim Du-han, also spelled Kim Doo-han was the leader of the Korean organised crime and the son of Kim Chwa-chin, a noted Korean freedom fighter and Anarchist.
Career
His nickname was Uisong. Doo Han Kim was the leader of the Jongro street gang during the Japanese occupation of of Korea. He was considered to be the greatest fist fighter in of Korea during his time.
After the end of Imperial Japanese rule in of Korea, Kim joined Syngman Rhee"s Liberal Party, where he served as a politician.
He was elected to the Third National Assembly in 1954 and the Sixth National Assembly in 1965. Personal life
Kim was the grandfather of South Korean actor Song Il-gook whose mother, Kim Eul-dong, is a politician and the daughter of Kim, who was one year old when he died.
Kim gained status as a folk hero in many South Korean films, in which he has been portrayed by actors such as Park Sang-minimum in the General"s Son trilogy. Kim was portrayed by Ahn Jae-mo (and later, Kim Yeong-cheol) in the 2002 Business S
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