| The Encyclopedia of World History. 2001. |
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| 1958, Oct. 22 |
| | | Beijing reported the withdrawal of the last Chinese forces from Korea. | 1 |
| | | 1959 |
| | | Cho Pong-am, a socialist who ran for the presidency in 1952 and 1956, and who did extremely well in 1956, was executed for violating the National Security Law. | 2 |
| | | 1960, March 15 |
| | Syngman Rhee, running for his fourth term, was reelected president. He ran unopposed, largely because the main opposition candidate, Cho Py ng-ok, died just prior to the election. Chang My n resigned in protest at the corruption used by the Liberal Party in the elections. | 3 |
| | | April 19 |
| | Police and troops fired on some 30,000 demonstratorsinitially students and later other citizensprotesting the rigged elections; 127 were reported killed and about 1,000 wounded. This became known as the April Revolution. Syngman Rhee resigned as president on April 26. The reins of government fell to H Ch ng, who moved to lift many of Rhee's repressive measures, rewrite the constitution (promulgated on June 15), and establish a parliament with two houses. | 4 |
| | | July 29 |
| | Parliamentary elections gave the Democratic Party a clear victory. The National Assembly elected Yun Po-s n (b. 1897) president and approved his appointment of Chang My n as premier. | 5 |
| | | Dec |
| | | Local elections were held at the provincial level. | 6 |
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| The Encyclopedia of World History, Sixth
edition. Peter N. Stearns, general editor. Copyright © 2001 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Maps by Mary Reilly, copyright © 2001 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. |
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