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         Kim Dae Jung:     more books (100)
  1. Presidents of South Korea: President of South Korea, Kim Dae-Jung, Roh Tae-Woo, Lee Myung-Bak, Roh Moo-Hyun, Chun Doo-Hwan, Park Chung-Hee
  2. Président de Corée Du Sud: Roh Moo-Hyun, Lee Myung-Bak, Kim Dae-Jung, Park Chung-Hee, Chun Doo-Hwan, Syngman Rhee, Roh Tae-Woo, Yun Po-Sun (French Edition)
  3. Kim: más neoliberalismo. (Kim Dae-Jung, presidente de Corea del Sur)(TT: Kim: more neoliberalism) (TA: Kim Dae-Jung, president of South Korea): An article from: Siempre! by Gerardo Yong, 1998-01-08
  4. South Korean People by Century: 20th-Century South Korean People, 21st-Century South Korean People, Syngman Rhee, Kim Dae-Jung, Roh Tae-Woo
  5. Haeoe chisigindul i pon kungmin ui chongbu 1-yon =: Achievements and challenges in the first year of the administration of President Kim Dae-jung (Korean Edition)
  6. Begegnung mit Kim Dae-jung. Korea auf dem Weg zu Frieden, Versöhnung und Einheit. by Hartmut Koschyk, 2002-12-01
  7. Honorary Fellows of Clare Hall, Cambridge: Kim Dae-Jung, Paul Mellon, Lee Bollinger, Brian Pippard, Ekhard Salje, Keith Peters, Gillian Beer
  8. Disease-Related Deaths in South Korea: Cancer Deaths in South Korea, Infectious Disease Deaths in South Korea, Kim Dae-Jung, Jang Jin-Young
  9. 1973 in Japan: Japanese Films of 1973, 1973 Intercontinental Cup, Kidnapping of Kim Dae-Jung, 1973 Japan Soccer League
  10. IN THE NAME OF JUSTICE AND PEACE MAIN SPEECHES OF KIM DAE-JUNG, M P PRESIDENT, NEW DEMOCRATIC PARTY IN 1991 by KIM DAE-JUNG, 1991
  11. Kim Dae-jung's "Three-Stage" Approach to Korean Reunification : Focusing on the South-North Confederal Stage by Kim Dae-Jung, 1997
  12. Korean Democracy Activists: South Korean Democracy Activists, Kim Dae-Jung, Ham Seok-Heon, Yun Bo-Seon, Moon Ik-Hwan, Kim Geun Tae
  13. Fellows of Clare Hall, Cambridge: Kim Dae-Jung, Joseph Brodsky, Paul Mellon, Lee Bollinger, John D. Barrow, Ralph Erskine, Brian Pippard
  14. Wirkt Sonnenschein?. Die Nordkorea-Politik von Kim Dä Jung zwischen Versöhnungsgipfel und Atomprogramm by Marc Oliver Dugge, 2003

21. The 1973 Abduction Of Kim Dae-jung By Park Jung Hee
The 1973 Abduction of Kim Daejung by Park Jung Hee. Kim was the man who personallygrabbed kim dae jung from the Hotel Grand Palace in Tokyo on August 8, 1973.
http://www.kimsoft.com/1997/kimdjx.htm
The 1973 Abduction of Kim Dae-jung by Park Jung Hee
The Yomiuri Shimbun reported on February 19, 1998 that South Korea's Agency for National Security Planning (ANSP commonly referred to as "KCIA") was indeed involved in the 1973 kidnapping of Kim Dae Jung from a Tokyo hotel. It reported that Dong-A Ilbo has obtained a copy of a secret internal memo of the ANSP - contrary to Kim Young Sam's claim that the Agency had no documents on this affair. The document claims that Lee Hu Rak (the ANSP head in 1973 and the man who signed the July 4th North-South Joint Statement on July 4, 1972) ordered Lee Chol Hee, an operations group leader, to bring back Kim Dae Jung at any cost. The secret documents disclose the missions and names of the 25 agents involved in the abduction. The list includes then first secretary Kim Bong Chan (went by the name of Kim Dong Un at the time of the incident). Kim was the man who personally grabbed Kim Dae Jung from the Hotel Grand Palace in Tokyo on August 8, 1973. Kim Dae Jung was in Japan to stir up support for his pro-democracy movements. He stayed at Hotel Grand Palace in Chiyoda ward, Tokyo. On August 8, 1973, he held a meeting in his room with two opposition figures, Yang Il Dong and Kim Gyong In. After the meeting Kim Dae Jung came out of his hotel room, when several KCIA agents pounced on him and dragged him into Yang Il Dong's room right next to Kim's. There were two Japanese guests in the hallway and Kim shouted "Save me! These are murderers!". But the two Japanese believed they were witnessing a gangster feud and kept quiet. Kim was anesthetized in Yang's room and taken to an underground parking lot via an elevator. He was driven to a KCIA safe house, blindfolded and gagged.

22. What Has Kim Dae Jung
What has kim dae jung s Government of People done for the Slain Girls?Precious little! What has kim dae jung s Defense Ministry done?
http://www.kimsoft.com/2002/2-girlsKDJ.htm
What has Kim Dae Jung's 'Government of People' done for the Slain Girls?
Precious little! The Korean people have no government for them
Source: What has Kim Dae Jung done for the slain girls? Just thinking about this question makes you want to cry. Even if we accept that the girls' deaths were accidental, if Kim Dae Jung has done the right things, our national pride would not have been hurt as much. Kim Dae Jung was more concerned with hurting America's feelings than hurting the Korean people's pride. Kim's Uncle Tom attitude has contributed to the rising tide of anti-American sentiments in South Korea. Kim has added insults to injuries by his slavish loyalty to the United States. Just whose 'President' is he?
What has Kim Dae Jung's Defense Ministry done?
The Defense Ministry has not uttered a word of protest since the girls were killed. When the killers were pronounced innocent by a US military tribunal on November 22, the ministry issued a statement on the following day: "We respect the judicial system of the US military and have noted that the trial was open and fair, but we fear that the acquittal may adversely affect the future US-Korea friendship and alliance." What does this say? It says in effect: "Dear Sirs: You have done an excellent job of clearing the accused. We Koreans better take it quietly and shouldn't do anything to make the Americans angry at us. " The Korean people have a low expectation of the Defense Ministry generals and were not surprised by their supine behavior. We hope that these generals stop dishonoring our military forces.

23. Revista ARBIL, Nº 73. Kim Dae Jung, De Patrón De Barcos A Patrón De La Nació
Translate this page kim dae jung, de patrón de barcos a patrón de la nación. por José Luis Orella. KimDae Jung se quedó en la Corea del Sur dedicándose a la política.
http://www.iespana.es/revista-arbil/(73)kind.htm
Arbil, apostando por los valores de la civilización cristiana
" + lmonth + " "); document.write(date + ", " + year + ""); // End > Por la Vida, la Familia, la Educación, la dignificación del Trabajo, la Unidad histórica, territorial y social de la Nación, y por la Regeneración Moral y Material de nuestra Patria y el mundo
Indice de contenidos Texto completo de la revista en documento comprimido La persona en general LOCE: un intento de buscar soluciones La revisión estratégica de la defensa (I) ... Texto Clásico: Homosexualidad y esperanza: Declaración de la asociación médica católica, de EEUU
CARTAS Arbil cede expresamente el permiso de reproducción, siempre bajo las premisas de buena fe, buen fin, gratuidad y citando su origen Revista Arbil nº 73 Kim Dae Jung, de patrón de barcos a patrón de la nación por José Luis Orella La evolución biográfica e ideológica del político coreano que llegó a ser el primer presidente católico del país
Kim Dae Young se dio cuenta de que le sería imposible subir al poder al estar su electorado concentrado en la región de Cholla, para extender su influencia política abrió el partido a una política de fusiones que le llevó a denominarse Partido Democrático. No obstante, el partido del gobierno hizo la misma operación con su antiguo compañero Kim Young Sam, naciendo el Partido Liberal Democrático, unión de los militares y los elementos más moderados de la oposición. En 1992 Kim Young Sam ganaba las elecciones presidenciales y Kim Dae Yung era acusado de complicidad con el régimen comunista del norte e incluso de recibir subvenciones de él. La derrota electoral obligó a Kim Dae Yung a tomarse un tiempo de conferencias por el extranjero, pero en 1995 volvió comandando un nuevo partido el Congreso Nacional para la Nueva Política. No obstante, la mayoría absoluta del gobierno mantuvo a Kin Dae Yung como líder de una minoría representativa de la opinión pública coreana.

24. , Nobel Peace Prize 2000, Kim Dae-jung
Kim Daejung has worked for South Korea s reconciliation with other neighbouringcountries, especially Japan. 2000 kim dae jung, Republic of Korea, 1925-.
http://boes.org/coop/lmines/nobel00.html
The Nobel Peace Prize for 2000
The Norwegian Nobel Committee has decided to award the Nobel Peace Prize for 2000 to Kim Dae-jung for his work for democracy and human rights in South Korea and in East Asia in general, and for peace and reconciliation with North Korea in particular.
In the course of South Korea's decades of authoritarian rule, despite repeated threats on his life and long periods in exile, Kim Dae-jung gradually emerged as his country's leading spokesman for democracy. His election in 1997 as the republic's president marked South Korea's definitive entry among the world's democracies. As president, Kim Dae-jung has sought to consolidate democratic government and to promote internal reconciliation within South Korea.
With great moral strength, Kim Dae-jung has stood out in East Asia as a leading defender of universal human rights against attempts to limit the relevance of those rights in Asia. His commitment in favour of democracy in Burma and against repression in East Timor has been considerable.
Through his ", Kim Dae-jung has attempted to overcome more than fifty years of war and hostility between North and South Korea. His visit to North Korea gave impetus to a process which has reduced tension between the two countries. There may now be hope that the cold war will also come to an end in Korea. Kim Dae-jung has worked for South Korea's reconciliation with other neighbouring countries, especially Japan.

25. Kim Dae Jung - Encyclopedia Article About Kim Dae Jung. Free Access, No Registra
encyclopedia article about kim dae jung. kim dae jung in Free onlineEnglish dictionary, thesaurus and encyclopedia. kim dae jung.
http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Kim Dae Jung
Dictionaries: General Computing Medical Legal Encyclopedia
Kim Dae Jung
Word: Word Starts with Ends with Definition Kim Dae-jung Revised Romanization The Revised Romanization of Korean , released by South Korean authorities in 2000 to romanize the Korean language, is the South Korean official replacement for the 1984 McCune-Reischauer-based Romanization system. The Revised Romanization System of 2000 has no non-alphabetic symbols except very limited, often optional, use of the hyphen. It was developed by the National Academy of the Korean Language starting in1995 and was released to the public on July 4, 2000, by South Korea's Ministry of Culture and Tourism, which explains the reason for the reduction of special characters was to eliminate difficulty of entering, or rather the ease of ignoring, diacritics on computers.
Click the link for more information. Gim Dae-jung December 3 December 3 is the 337th day (338th on leap years) of the year in the Gregorian calendar. There are 28 days remaining.
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26. Kim Dae Jung. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
Edition. 2001. kim dae jung. (k md j ng) (KEY) , 1924–, president(1998–2003) of South Korea. A native of South Cholla prov.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/ki/KimDaeJ.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia Cultural Literacy World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations Respectfully Quoted English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Kim Dae Jung (k m d j ng) ( KEY Kim Young Sam . Kim has sought improved relations with North Korea and has called for an easing of U.S. policy toward it, and in 2000 he traveled to the North for a historic summit with Kim Jong Il (see under

27. Korean President Kim Dae Jung
President Clinton Welcomes Korean President kim dae jung. THE WHITEHOUSE Office of the Press Secretary. Korean President kim dae jung.
http://clinton4.nara.gov/textonly/WH/New/html/19980609-3059.html
President Clinton Welcomes Korean President Kim Dae Jung

THE WHITE HOUSE
Office of the Press Secretary
For Immediate Release June 9, 1998
REMARKS BY PRESIDENT CLINTON
AND PRESIDENT KIM DAE JUNG OF SOUTH KOREA
AT ARRIVAL CEREMONY
The South Grounds
10:50 A.M. EDT PRESIDENT CLINTON: I am proud to welcome President KimDae-jung, and the entire Korean delegation to the United States andto the White House. We live in remarkable times. In the 1980s, some of thegreatest heroes of freedom were the political prisoners of repressiveregimes Lech Walesa in Poland, Vaclav Havel in Czechoslovakia,Nelson Mandela in South Africa, and Kim Dae-jung, who faced a deathsentence in South Korea after years of unjust and brutal treatment bythe government. How very different things are now. Lech Walesa waselected Poland's President; Vaclav Havel and Nelson Mandela are thePresidents of their countries; and Kim Dae-jung is here today asPresident, after the first ever democratic change of power from thegoverning party to the opposition in the 50-year history of theRepublic of Korea. (Applause.) The irresistible longing for freedom, human rights, anddemocracy has carried Kim Dae-jung to the presidency of his countryand now back to America, where he once lived in exile and where therehas long been strong bipartisan support for Korean democracy.(Applause.)

28. Kim Dae Jung --  Britannica Student Encyclopedia
kim dae jung Britannica Student Encyclopedia. MLA style kim dae jung. BritannicaStudent Encyclopedia. 2004. Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service.
http://www.britannica.com/ebi/article?eu=336168&query=campbell, kim&ct=ebi

29. Kim Dae Jung --  Encyclopædia Britannica
kim dae jung Encyclopædia Britannica Article. MLA style kim dae jung. EncyclopædiaBritannica. 2004. Encyclopædia Britannica Premium Service.
http://www.britannica.com/eb/article?eu=46517&tocid=0&query=kim young sam

30. Kim Dae Jung
much more. kim dae jung (Kim Taejung; b. 1925) Kim was born on Haui-do,a poor island in Muan Country in south-western Korea. His
http://www.asiasource.org/news/special_reports/kimdaejung.cfm
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31. Korean History - Kim Dae Jung (President Of Korea)
Korean History Main Page. The Kim Dae-jung Administration. With theinauguration of Kim Dae-jung to fill the 15th presidential term
http://www.asianinfo.org/asianinfo/korea/history/kim_dae_jung.htm
Home About Us Search Korean History - Main Page The Kim Dae-jung Administration With the inauguration of Kim Dae-jung to fill the 15th presidential term on February 25, 1998, the era of the Government of the People dawned- an era in which all the People can participate as the master of the nation. In his inaugural speech, President Kim, urging the nation to overcome the national crisis and make a new leap forward, said it was the day when the first democratic transition of power had been realized. He called his Administration "the Government of the People," and declared that he intended to push democratization and a free market economy in parallel. President Kim said his Administration would overcome the economic crisis through reform, undertake a spiritual revolution valuing the rights of the individual, pursue educational reform, and liquidate the Cold-War style confrontational relationship with the North. He enunciated his intention to realize participatory democracy in which all people would take part and control politics. Facing the greatest national crisis since the Korean War, President Kim said the nation was being asked to shed sweat and tears once again and to overcome the crisis without fail and as soon as possible through reform and by sharing pain. The December 18, 1997 presidential election was deeply significant in that it signaled the first transition of power from the ruling to an opposition party in 50 years. It was a kind of election revolution achieved through the ardent wishes of the Korean people who eagerly anticipated the dawning of a new age. News media around the world described the inauguration as the day genuine democracy began in Korea and said President Kim was a world-class leader who could lead his nation out of crisis and rebuild it.

32. The Presidency Of Kim Dae-jung
The presidency of Kim Daejung (Feb 1998–Feb 2003). kim dae jung’s Turnaboutto Bite Seoulites By Han Il Su, People’s Korea, 14 January 1998.
http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/55a/index-abd.html
The presidency of Kim Dae-jung
Hartford Web Publishing is not the author of the documents in World History Archives
By Han Il Su, 14 January 1998. President-elect Kim Dae Jung, a longtime friend of unionists and students, got plenty of promises to break. The first breach of promise came last November when Kim explicitly expressed his intention not to abolish the all-powerful National Security Law; a month later he generously accepted stringent terms attached by IMF in exchange for its $57 billion loan, despite his promises to labor.
From opposition leader to IMF linchpin
By Peter Symonds, World Socialist Web Site, 11 March 1998. Amid a rapidly deepening economic and social crisis in South Korea, long-time opposition figure Kim Dae Jung was formally sworn in as president on February 25. Kim was a leader of the bourgeois opposition to the military regime and, at various times, had substantial support among workers and oppressed layers of the middle class.
Kim Dae Jung Enforces IMF Austerity
Workers Vanguard

33. TIME: Cover Story
SOUTH KOREA INCREDIBLE JOURNEY Torture, assassination attempts and years in exilehave prepared kim dae jung for what will be his new presidency s real
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/1998/int/980302/box1.html
BIG BROTHER:
How the U.S. saved Kim's life, twice SOUTH KOREA:
INCREDIBLE JOURNEY
Torture, assassination attempts and years in exile have prepared Kim Dae Jung for what will be his new presidency's real challenge-rescuing his country from the economic brink
"I never lost my faith" VIEWPOINT:
Why reunification is still a dream SOUTH KOREA March 2, 1998 VOL. 151 NO. 8 Cloak-and-dagger games:
Saving the life of a leader im dae jung had just finished a secret lunch with another Korean opposition leader at Tokyo's downtown Grand Palace Hotel on Aug. 8, 1973. As Kim stepped into a hallway, a group of men grabbed him, ordering him in Korean to keep silent. Beaten and smothered with a chloroform-soaked rag, Kim was bound, blindfolded and dumped into a waiting car. By the following night, he had been transferred to a Korean freighter at sea. There he was bound again, his face covered in tape with air holes around his nose. As the ship moved off into the darkness, his captors roped Kim to a traditional Korean funeral plank for burial; weights were attached to his wrists. A devout Catholic, Kim saw the end coming and began to pray. Suddenly, as if in response, the rumble of aircraft engines swept over the ship. As crew members shouted "an airplane," Kim heard heavy objects falling into the sea. Then the ship turned so sharply Kim was thrown to the deck. "Are you Mr. Kim Dae Jung?" a sked a voice, which Kim aides now believe belonged to the ship's cook. "I think the worst is over and you are alive." The fly-by had scared Kim's captors enough to save his life.

34. TIME Asia Magazine: For One Old Soldier, The Battle Is Over -- Dec. 09, 2002
Asia For One Old Soldier, The Battle Is Over To Koreans, kim dae jung s presidencyachieved so much less than it promised BY DONALD MACINTYRE/SEOUL
http://www.time.com/time/asia/magazine/article/0,13673,501021209-395415,00.html
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For One Old Soldier, The Battle Is Over
To Koreans, Kim Dae Jung's presidency achieved so much less than it promised
BY DONALD MACINTYRE/SEOUL
KI HO PARK/KISTONE FOR TIME Fade Out: Kim retires unpopular and irrelevant
Fear Factor: The big debate in South Korea's elections is about the North Monday, Dec. 02, 2002 When I met Kim Dae Jung some weeks ago, I was struck by how the years had caught up with him. He shuffled slowly into an elegant reception room at his official residence and proffered a hand that felt too soft, the skin papery thin and blotched with liver spots. His clothes hung loosely on his frame. Perhaps I shouldn't have been surprised that the feisty democracy fighter who had once faced down South Korea's generals looked ready to turn in his sword. After all, his official birthday has him turning 77. (His friends say he is closer to 80.) As we settled down to chat, Kim suggested I remove my jacket given the warmth of the room: "They have set the temperature higher to suit my old age." It's not just age, however, that makes Kim appear frail. When he came to office nearly five years ago, he was a towering moral figure—Asia's Nelson Mandela, according to his many admirers. Jailed, beaten and threatened with death, he was the face of the struggle for democracy in South Korea. You felt he had the chance to become not just a good President but a great one. But with barely three months to go before he hands over power to the winner of South Korea's Dec. 19 presidential election, Kim has become a lonely, almost tragic figure, deeply unpopular, politically spent and increasingly irrelevant.

35. Kim Dae Jung's Inauguration As South Korean President: From Opposition Leader To
Amid a rapidly deepening economic and social crisis in South Korea, longtime oppositionfigure kim dae jung was formally sworn in as president on February 25
http://www.wsws.org/news/1998/mar1998/kore-m11.shtml
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Kim Dae Jung's inauguration as South Korean president
From opposition leader to IMF linchpin
By Peter Symonds 11 March 1998 Amid a rapidly deepening economic and social crisis in South Korea, long-time opposition figure Kim Dae Jung was formally sworn in as president on February 25 at an elaborate ceremony attended by 45,000 people, including pop stars, diplomats, businessmen and political leaders. Every previous South Korean president and prime minister was on the guest list. The event illustrated the degree to which this 74-year-old veteran politician has become the linchpin for the maintenance of capitalist rule in South Korea. Kim has been widely hailed in the world media as a symbol of the struggle for democracy in Asia. He did, in fact, suffer persecution, long periods of imprisonment and attempts on his life in retaliation for his opposition to the military dictatorships which ruled South Korea for much of the post-World War Two period. He was a leader of the bourgeois opposition to the military regime and, at various times, had substantial support among workers and oppressed layers of the middle class. In reality, however, he always represented social interests distinct from and fundamentally antagonistic to those of the working class. To an increasing extent he became the spokesman for those sections of Korean business that were impeded by the military's close relations with the large corporations known as the chaebol.

36. Kim Dae Jung Detains Union Leaders
Auto layoffs spark general strike call in Korea. kim dae jung detainsunion leaders. By Mike Head 23 July 1998. Thousands of South
http://www.wsws.org/workers/1998/july1998/kor-j23.shtml
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Auto layoffs spark general strike call in Korea
Kim Dae Jung detains union leaders
By Mike Head 23 July 1998 Thousands of South Korean auto and metal workers walked off the job yesterday in the first stage of a proposed indefinite general strike from today against mass retrenchments. The confrontation with the government of President Kim Dae Jung began on Monday when Hyundai and Daewoo workers protested against the issuing of 5,600 dismissal notices. Both companies shut down their assembly plants for at least three days in a bid to prevent action by workers, incensed by the 2,600 notices handed out by Hyundai and the 2,995 by Daewoo. Hyundai stood down an additional 900 workers for two years without pay and plans to sack another 6,842 workers if the unions fail to agree to a 21.7 percent pay cut. It has already shed 5,336 workers through three rounds of "voluntary retirements". Defying the shutdown, scores of Hyundai workers occupied assembly lines. About 10,000 workers and their families rallied outside the company's main factory in the southern city of Ulsan. Some 100 have set up a tent city in front of the plant. Earlier, workers entered offices and removed items of furniture before setting alight to them. Others climbed an 83-metre-high chimney and refused to leave until the dismissals were withdrawn. In Seoul, 800 Daewoo workers demonstrated.

37. -- Beliefnet.com
Finalist kim dae jung President of South Korea who championed democracy reconciliationkim dae jung, president of the Republic of Korea and most recent
http://www.beliefnet.com/story/58/story_5830_1.html
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Who's Inspired You in 2001? Tell us who you would nominate for the Most Inspiring Person of 2001.

38. Current Events: Korea's Prize - Kim Dae Jung - Brief Article
Print friendly Tell a friend Find subscription deals Korea s Prize kim dae jung - Brief Article Current Events, Dec 15, 2000. Peace
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Dec 15, 2000
Peace Efforts Earn Nobel Prize For South Korea's Kim Dae Jung SEOUL, SOUTH KOREA Kim Dae Jung, the president of South Korea, has said he has two wishes: One is to unite the two halves of war-torn Korea; the other is to receive the Nobel Peace Prize. One of his wishes recently came true. On December 10, in Oslo, Norway, Kim Dae Jung was to accept the peace award in recognition of his strides toward achieving his other, more daunting wishto make peace with North Korea. "Because of his great moral strength," the Nobel Peace Prize Committee said on October 13 in announcing the award, "Kim Dae Jung has stood out in East Asia as a defender of democracy and universal human rights." During his rule, the announcement continued, "Kim Dae Jung has attempted to overcome more than 50 years of war and hostility between North and South Korea." Life's Work Born in 1925 in the southwestern province of Cholla, Kim has spent much of his life fighting for freedom, human rights, and democracywhich has often forced him to fight for his life.

39. UD - Fredsprisen 2000 Til Kim Dae Jung
Fredsprisen 2000 til kim dae jung. Da kim dae jung stilte til valg som presidenti SørKorea i 1997, fikk han en tilsynelatende unnselig gave.
http://odin.dep.no/ud/norsk/generell/p30000701/p30000704/032001-990593/dok-bn.ht
Odin Regjeringen Departementene Arkiv ... Norge i verden
Fredsprisen 2000 til Kim Dae Jung
Nobel-komiteen hedrer "solskinnspolitikken"
Da Kim Dae Jung stilte til valg som president i S¸r-Korea i 1997, fikk han en tilsynelatende unnselig gave. Nelson Mandela for¦rte ham et velbrukt armb¥ndsur. Det var den klokken han hadde tellet timene med gjennom 27 ¥r som politisk fange p¥ Robben Island i S¸r-Afrika
­ Jeg h¥per den bringer lykke, skrev Mandela.
Av Christian Borch
Kim vant valget. For f¸rste gang fikk S¸r-Korea et maktskifte som f¸lge av en ¥pen, demokratisk prosess. Da han flyttet inn i presidentboligen i Seoul i februar 1998, sto Kim med ett foran virkeliggj¸relsen av en livslang politisk dr¸m, etter ti¥r med forf¸lgelse, tortur, d¸dsdommer og fengsling. Som Nelson Mandela hadde han aldri g¥tt p¥ akkord.
Forsoning
Datoen 13. juni 2000 vil g¥ over i historien som et vendepunkt i en av tidenes bitreste konflikter. Kim Dae Jung ble tatt imot i Pyongyang i Nord-Korea. Det var f¸rste skritt i en forsoningspolitikk som har v¦rt umulig under alle tidligere s¸rkoreanske ledere. I ukene som fulgte, ble verden vitne til hundrevis av koreanere som kastet seg i armene p¥ n¦re slektninger de ikke hadde sett eller snakket med p¥ nesten femti ¥r.
Kim Dae Jungs "solskinnspolitikk" var satt ut i livet - med overraskende positiv st¸tte fra Kim Jong Il i nord.

40. Odin - Nobelpreiskomitee Ehrt "Sonnenscheinpolitik": Friedensnobelpreis 2000 An
2000 an kim dae jung. Christian Borch. kim dae jung hat die Wahlen gewonnen.
http://odin.dep.no/odin/tysk/om_odin/adresser/032001-990387/dok-bu.html
Normalanzeige „hnliche Dokumente
Nobelpreiskomitee ehrt "Sonnenscheinpolitik":
Friedensnobelpreis 2000 an Kim Dae Jung
Christian Borch In der Opposition Folter und Todesurteil Der Humanist Der Artikelverfasser ist Auslandsmitarbeiter der Nachrichtenabteilung des Norwegischen Fernsehens NRK.

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