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The unpopular Chun regime and its constitutional framework was brought down
in 1987 largely by the student agitation that beset the regime. Student
activists set the tone and agenda of the society as a whole because the
government and the government-controlled press had lost their credibility. The
opposition parties worked with the students, although they disagreed on the
ultimate aim--the politicians wanted reform, while the students demanded
revolution. The opposition politicians wanted constitutional reform to replace
the existing system of electing the president through the handpicked electoral
college with direct popular election. The students attacked not only the
military leaders in power, but also the entire socio-political and economic
establishment.
Initially, the public was apathetic to the confrontation between the student
demonstrators and government, but the daily fracas on the streets and the
never-ending smell of tear gas aroused their ire. The news about the torture and
death of a student, Pak Chong-ch'ol, by the police touched the sore nerves of
the people. President Chun attempted to squash the opposition by issuing a
declaration on April 13, 1987, to suspend the "wasteful debate" about
constitutional reform until a new government was installed at the end of his
seven-year term. The declaration was, instead, his regime's swan song. Chun
wanted to have his successor "elected" by his handpicked supporters;
the public greeted the declaration with universal outrage. Even the Reagan
administration, which had been taciturn about South Korea's internal politics,
urged the Chun government not to ignore the outrage. Finally, on June 29, 1987,
Roh Tae Woo, the government party's choice as Chun's successor, made a dramatic
announcement in favor of a new democratic constitution that embodied all the
opposition's demands.
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