S Korea inaugurates first female president

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Park Geun-Hye, the daughter of South Korea’s late military ruler, has been sworn in as the country’s first female president. Monday’s two-and-a-half hour inauguration ceremony included a 21-gun salute and a performance by Korean rapper Psy, whose song “Gangnam Style” was the global hit of 2012.
As leader of Asia’s fourth-largest economy, Park, 61, faces significant challenges, including a nuclearised North Korea, a slowing economy and soaring welfare costs in one of the world’s most rapidly ageing societies. “North Korea’s recent nuclear test is a challenge to the survival and future of the Korean people,” Park said in her inauguration speech. “I urge North Korea to abandon its nuclear ambitions without delay and embark on the path to peace and shared development.” Park had campaigned on a promise of greater, “trust-based” engagement with Pyongyang. Observers say her hands have been tied by the international outcry over Pyongyang’s recent nuclear test, which will have emboldened members of her ruling conservative party who oppose closer engagement. John Delury, a professor of International Relations at Yonsei University in Seoul, told Al Jazeera North Korea “is notoriously a difficult country to engage with”, but despite that “expectations are high” among the South Korean public. “But, she has to start by reopening the channels of dialogue directly with North Korea and through that find the steps to improve relations,” he said.
Al Jazeera’s Harry Fawcett, reporting from Seoul, said Park’s approval rating before the inauguration “dropped from 51 to 50 percent, which is pretty low compared to previous approval ratings – but that’s more an assessment of her at the time, not to do with hopes for her presidency”.
Father’s legacy: Park is taking office a little more than 50 years after her father, Park Chung-He, seized power in a military coup. He went on to rule the country with an iron fist for the next 18 years until his eventual assassination, and remains a divisive figure – credited with lifting the country out of poverty but reviled for his regime’s human rights abuses. His daughter’s political career has always been shadowed by her father’s legacy – a fact played both to her advantage and her detriment.
In an effort at reconciliation, she publicly acknowledged the excesses of her father’s regime during her campaign and apologised to the families of its victims.
Gender equality: Critics accuse her of being autocratic and suggest her political legitimacy is largely derived from her background. Jung Mi-Ae, a professor at Kookmin University, stressed that after Park’s father was killed, she built her political brand alone before winning a national assembly seat in 1998.

2 COMMENTS

  1. S Korea inaugurates first female president??? Does not sound good, does it? Dear newspaper get someone with command on English. You seriously need to read the contributions you get from your reporters and associates. Even today's paper is full of grammatical errors as always. This is shameful situation for a paper representing a country where official language is English and it is widely read/ written if not spoken.

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