Chun Doo-Hwan (born January 18, 1931, Hapcheon, South Gyeongsang, Korea [now in South Korea]—died November 23, 2021, Seoul, South Korea) Korean soldier and politician who was president of South Korea from 1980 to 1988.
Born into a peasant family, Chun entered the Korean Military Academy in 1951. Following his graduation in 1955, he became an infantry officer and in 1958 married Lee Soon Ja, daughter of Brig. Gen. Lee Kyu Dong. Chun commanded a South Korean division in South Vietnam during the Vietnam War and rose rapidly through the ranks. After Park Chung Hee seized power in 1961, Chun served as civil service secretary for the junta (1961–62) and, in 1963, with the nominal restoration of civilian government, as chief of personnel of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency (KCIA; now the National Intelligence Service). He served in various other official posts and was made a brigadier general in 1978.
After the assassination of President Park in 1979, Chun, as the chief of army security command, took charge of the investigation of his death. In December 1979 he arrested several suspects, including his rival, the army chief of staff, Gen. Chung Seung-Hwa(Jeong Seung-Hwa). Following these arrests, he purged many of Chung’s supporters in a virtual coup by one military faction against another. Although the official president was Choi Kyu Hah, Chun emerged as the real holder of power, and in April 1980 he became head of the KCIA. In May the military under Chun’s leadership dropped all pretense of civilian rule, declared martial law, and brutally suppressed democratic civilian opposition in the city of Gwangju.
After President Choi resigned on August 16, Chun resigned from the army and on August 27 became president. With the country still under martial law, Chun pushed through a new constitution in late 1980 that allowed him to govern with a firm hand. Chun’s tenure was punctuated by several crises, notably a financial scandal in 1982 that forced him to replace half his cabinet and an assassination attempt in Burma (Myanmar) by North Korean agents in 1983 that resulted in the deaths of several top aides and ministers. As president, Chun devoted his efforts to maintaining economic growth and political stability. South Korea continued its export-led economic growth under Chun, and the nation industrialized rapidly.
Chun was prohibited by the terms of the 1980 constitution from serving more than one seven-year term, and in 1987 he picked Roh Tae Woo to be the candidate of the ruling Democratic Justice Party (now part of the Grand National Party). He retired from politics after being succeeded by Roh in 1988. Despite public gestures of atonement for abuses of power during his presidency, Chun could not distance himself from the lingering public memory of his actions. In December 1995 both he and Roh were indicted on charges of having accepted bribes during their terms as president. In addition, the outcry over the extent of the fraud (hundreds of millions of dollars) prompted prosecutors to pursue charges (which had been brought by the prosecutor’s office in 1994) related to their involvement in the 1979 coup and their actions during the 1980 uprising in Kwangju. Both were found guilty of all charges in August 1996. Chun was sentenced to death and Roh to 221/2 years in prison. Chun’s sentence was later reduced to life imprisonment and Roh’s to 17 years; both received presidential pardons in December 1997.