home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- WORLD, Page 47World NotesSOUTH KOREARoh Clears Up The Confusion
-
-
-
- It's hard for any President to get his program going in the
- face of heavy political opposition. It's triply difficult --
- not to mention confusing -- when that opposition consists of
- three disgruntled political parties. The solution for South
- Korea's President Roh Tae Woo was to wade in and woo. Last week
- Roh stunned the nation by announcing that two of the three Kims
- who control the competition will join him in a ruling coalition
- he describes as "middle-of-the-road democrats."
-
- Roh's new team, tentatively called the Democratic Liberal
- Party, embraces his own Democratic Justice Party, Kim Young
- Sam's Reunification Democratic Party and Kim Jong Pil's
- National Democratic Republican Party. This leaves Kim Dae Jung,
- head of the Party for Peace and Democracy, out in the cold with
- a mere 71 seats in the 299-seat legislature.
-
- Kim Dae Jung denounced Roh's gambit as a "political coup
- d'etat" and demanded a general election, but most South Koreans
- were not so disgruntled. The country's fractious four-party
- system is unwieldy and inefficient, and besides, the opposition
- parties themselves are largely one-man shows. If nothing else,
- the realignment will reduce South Korea's confusing roster of
- same-sounding political parties, and perhaps with it, put an
- end to internecine bickering in the legislature.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-