ID :
63175
Fri, 05/29/2009 - 12:16
Auther :

(2nd LD) Tearful S. Koreans bid farewell to former President Roh


(ATTN: RECASTS headline, lead; UPDATES throughout; TRIMS)
By Shin Hae-in
SEOUL, May 29 (Yonhap) -- Clad in black and holding yellow ribbons, thousands of
weeping South Koreans packed central Seoul Friday, bidding farewell to former
President Roh Moo-hyun, lauded as a fighter against authoritarianism and regional
divisions.

Roh died Saturday at the age of 62, leaping from a mountainside precipice above
his rural hometown amid a bribery investigation that tarnished his legacy as an
anti-corruption fighter. He served as the country's leader from 2003 to 2008.
A state-organized funeral was held Friday at an ancient royal palace in Seoul,
attended by some 3,000 dignitaries, including President Lee Myung-bak, former
Presidents Kim Dae-jung and Kim Young-sam, lawmakers and diplomats in Seoul.
"We have gathered here today to bid goodbye to former President Roh Moo-hyun who
spent his life fighting for human rights, democracy and the end of
authoritarianism -- a true 'people's president' he was," Prime Minister Han
Seung-soo said in his memorial address at Gyeongbok Palace.
Her voice breaking in tears, Roh's former Prime Minister Han Myung-sook said,
"Sorry, we love you, rest in peace."
A crowd of people waving yellow, the color Roh used for his 2002 presidential
election, began to march down the streets after watching the ceremony on large
screens outside the palace. Police tightened surveillance to prevent any protests
by Roh supporters who claim the incumbent administration drove him to death with
a politically motivated probe.
"You are a political murderer!" Baek Won-woo, an opposition party lawmaker,
shouted at President Lee as he was offering a flower to the deceased during the
funeral, immediately being dragged out by security guards. The main opposition
Democratic Party has been mounting calls for an official apology from Lee and his
party for Roh's suicide.
Roh's sudden death triggered a mass outpouring of grief for days across the
nation, which was divided during Roh's presidency over his bold policies
challenging regionalism, polarization of wealth and a reconciliatory approach
toward North Korea.
Millions of mourners have paid their respects at some 140 altars nationwide with
authorities lining up riot police in Seoul and elsewhere to prevent the
gatherings from turning into anti-government demonstrations.
Some one million people have visited the memorial site in Roh's home village
Bongha, where the former president retired after leaving office in February last
year, according to officials of the funeral committee.
"I miss him so much already," said college student Kim Eun-joo, who attended the
funeral with other members of Roh's support group Nosamo, a Korean acronym for
"people who love Roh." "I just hope he remembers how much we loved him and how
much we regret having ever doubted him."
A massive memorial rite was held at Seoul Plaza after the funeral to wish the
deceased a peaceful repose before the hearse and the convoy head to Suwon,
adjacent to Seoul, for cremation.
"I lay awake with frustration at night because he is gone and I do not know whom
to blame for his death," said office worker Moon Han-yong. "I just never thought
he was suffering enough to take his own life. I am so sad, so angry."
Born to a poor family in Gimhae, southeastern Korea, Roh became a self-taught
human rights lawyer who earned fame for representing college students detained
and tortured by counterespionage officers in 1981 for studying leftist theories.
Especially popular among the younger generation for his bold reformist beliefs,
Roh was elected president in 2002 with supporters using the new medium of the
Internet to create a loyal following.
Just 15 months after he returned to Bongha Village, Roh became mired in a bribery
scandal involving US$6 million he and his family had allegedly received from a
wealthy businessman. Becoming the third former president in the nation to
appear before prosecutors, Roh denied personal ties to the scandal.
Roh's body will be cremated and the ashes will be taken back for burial near
Bongha, about 450 kilometers southeast of Seoul, as he requested in a note left
to family just before his death.
hayney@yna.co.kr
(END)

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