Difference between revisions of "Park Geun-hye"

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In 2016, a scandal erupted about her allowing a friend to get involved in government policy, leading to suggestions that she is something of a [[puppet leader]].
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In 2016, it emerged that '''Park Geun-hye''', [[President of South Korea]] since 2013, has been sharing national security documents with [[Choi Soon-sil]], whose father [[Choi Tae-min]] was a cult-leading, pseudo-religious figure.  This lead to suggestions that she was a [[puppet leader]]. A November 2016 poll found her popularity was below 4%.<ref>http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/south-korean-president-park-geun-hyes-approval-rating-falls-4-1593347</ref> In spite of millions of Koreans protesting against her leadership, she has still not resigned.
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==Election rigging ==
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[[WhoWhatWhy]] reports that "Park benefited from the [[Korean National Intelligence Service]]’s unlawful [[rigging of the election]] in her favor. It hired “trolls” to set up numerous fake Twitter accounts to create the illusion of widespread public support for Park."<ref name=www2017>http://whowhatwhy.org/2017/02/13/privileges-power-comparing-trump-south-koreas-impeached-president/</ref>
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===Media silence===
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[[WhoWhatWhy]] suggests that "''[[The Chosun Papers]]'' (the country’s largest daily), had likely been aware of critical components of the scandal all along, and simply kept quiet. Critics perceived this as a deliberate attempt by the media to execute its own master plan for [[puppeteering]] Park."<ref name=www2017/>
 
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==References==
 
==References==
 
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Revision as of 17:05, 13 February 2017

Person.png Park Geun-hye  Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(puppet leader)
Park Geun-hye.jpg
Born1952-02-02
Daegu, South Korea
Alma materSogang University
ParentsPark Chung-Hee
PartySaenuri Party

Employment.png President of South Korea

In office
25 February 2013 - Present
Preceded byLee Myung-bak

Employment.png Leader of the Saenuri Party

In office
17 December 2011 - 15 May 2012

Employment.png Leader of the Saenuri Party

In office
23 March 2004 - 10 July 2006

Employment.png Member of the National Assembly

In office
30 May 2012 - 10 December 2012
Preceded byPark Geun-hye

Employment.png Member of the National Assembly

In office
3 April 1998 - 29 May 2012
Succeeded byPark Geun-hye

In 2016, it emerged that Park Geun-hye, President of South Korea since 2013, has been sharing national security documents with Choi Soon-sil, whose father Choi Tae-min was a cult-leading, pseudo-religious figure. This lead to suggestions that she was a puppet leader. A November 2016 poll found her popularity was below 4%.[1] In spite of millions of Koreans protesting against her leadership, she has still not resigned.

Election rigging

WhoWhatWhy reports that "Park benefited from the Korean National Intelligence Service’s unlawful rigging of the election in her favor. It hired “trolls” to set up numerous fake Twitter accounts to create the illusion of widespread public support for Park."[2]

Media silence

WhoWhatWhy suggests that "The Chosun Papers (the country’s largest daily), had likely been aware of critical components of the scandal all along, and simply kept quiet. Critics perceived this as a deliberate attempt by the media to execute its own master plan for puppeteering Park."[2]

 

Event Participated in

EventStartEndLocation(s)Description
WEF/Annual Meeting/201422 January 201425 January 2014Switzerland
World Economic Forum
2604 guests in Davos considered "Reshaping The World"
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References