President Yoon Suk Yeol paid his respects to the victims of a 1960 pro-democracy civil uprising Friday, the 64th anniversary of the watershed event that led to the ouster of South Korea’s first President Rhee Syng-man.Yoon visited the April 19th National Cemetery in northern Seoul, which holds the remains of 186 people killed in the uprising, where he offered flowers and burned incense in front of a monument honoring the victims.Yoon prayed for the souls of the victims and resolved to further develop the liberal democracy they defended through revolution, the presidential office said.
The civil revolt was touched off by public anger over vote rigging in the presidential election by the Rhee government in power at the time.A series of nationwide student protests culminated on April 19, with hundreds of demonstrators killed or wounded in clashes with armed police.The uprising ultimately forced Rhee to step down after 12 years in office. Rhee was the first president of South Korea, which was founded in 1948 after its liberation from Japan’s 1910-45 colonial rule. Rhee later went into exile in Hawaii and died there in 스포츠토토존 1965.