Today in Korean history
June 26
1949 -- Kim Koo, one of the nation's most revered patriots, is assassinated by an ultra-right-wing military officer. Seeing the nation sharply divided between the right and the left soon after the 1945 independence from Japanese colonial rule, Kim made his utmost efforts to mediate and promote a unified Korea. However, Korea, divided into separate states the previous year, was going through tumultuous conflicts between pro-U.S. capitalists and communists supported by the Soviet Union.
A majority of students and progressive scholars supported Kim, but he also faced fierce opposition from right-wing politicians and businessmen. Kim, who was a key leader of the provisional Korean government-in-exile in China under Japanese colonial rule, played a pivotal role in the country's independence movement.
1950 -- The U.N. Security Council holds an emergency meeting and passes a resolution to dispatch troops to South Korea to fight invading North Korean forces. The Korean War had started the previous day, causing many people to flee southward.
The North Koreans easily advanced south at the beginning of the conflict, but the U.N. forces pushed them back to the border with China, where large numbers of Chinese troops intervened to help North Korea.
The fighting ended with a cease-fire, not a peace treaty, on July 27, 1953, meaning the Koreas are still technically at war.
1974 -- South Korea and the United States sign an agreement to cooperate on civil uses of atomic energy.
2008 -- North Korea hands over a list detailing its plutonium activity to China, following the aid-for-denuclearization deal signed in 2007.
2012 -- South Korea and Colombia conclude free trade talks in Bogota.
2014 -- President Park Geun-hye retains Prime Minister Chung Hong-won two days after her second choice, former conservative journalist Moon Chang-keuk, withdraws his nomination amid mounting criticism of his alleged pro-Japanese views.
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