Ex-South Korean president dies after fall in mountains; suicide note found
Last Updated: Saturday, May 23, 2009 | 1:08 AM ET
The Associated Press
In this undated picture, former South Korean president Roh Moo-hyun speaks at the Presidential Blue House in Seoul, South Korea. Yonhap/Associated PressFormer South Korean president Roh Moo-hyun, embroiled in a broadening corruption scandal, jumped to his death while hiking in the mountains behind his rural southern home, his lawyer said. He was 62.
Roh had been hiking in the village of Bongha on Saturday morning when he threw himself off a mountainside rock, lawyer Moon Jae-in told reporters. In a suicide note left for his family, Roh called life "difficult" and apologized for making "too many people suffer," a TV report said.
Roh was rushed to a hospital in the nearby port city of Busan and died from head injuries, officials at Busan National University hospital said.
The lawyer confirmed that Roh left a "brief" suicide note for his family. Investigators have not seen the note, a Busan police official said. He did not give his name, citing department policy.
MBC television said the note asked that his body be cremated.
The apparent suicide — the first by a modern South Korean leader — shocked the nation.
President Lee Myung-bak said Saturday the news was "truly hard to believe" and called Roh's death "sad and tragic," presidential spokesman Lee Dong-kwan said.
Roh, a former human rights lawyer, served as president from 2003 and 2008, campaigning as a "clean" politician in a country with a long history of corruption. But he and his family have been ensnared in recent weeks in a burgeoning bribery scandal.
Last month, state prosecutors questioned Roh for some 13 hours about allegations that he accepted more than $6 million US in bribes from a South Korean businessman while president — accusations that deeply shamed Roh.
"I have no face to show to the people. I am sorry for disappointing you," an emotional-looking Roh told reporters April 30 before departing for questioning in Seoul.
Roh took power after a surprise 2002 election win on a campaign pledge not to "kowtow" to the United States, a pledge that resonated with young voters.
He maintained predecessor President Kim Dae-jung's "sunshine policy" of offering North Korea aid as a way to facilitate reconciliation, holding a summit in Pyongyang with North Korean leader Kim Jong Il in 2007, the second such meeting between leaders of the wartime rivals.
Roh came from a poor farming family, went to a commercial high school and never received a college education. He studied on his own to pass the difficult bar exam and built a reputation as a lawyer defending students accused of sedition under past military rule.
He was once arrested and had his law licence suspended for supporting an outlawed labour protest.
Roh was impeached in 2004 for calling on the public to vote for candidates from his Uri Party in parliamentary elections, a violation of the president's political neutrality. He was the first South Korean president to be impeached, but he was reinstated after two months of suspension when a court ruled against the impeachment.
Roh's public approval ratings fell amid widespread criticism of his economic policies. His security policies, seen by conservatives as too pro-North Korean, also contributed to the bad ratings.
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