South Korea mourns death of former prime minister who nurtured democracy

South Korea mourns death of former prime minister who nurtured democracy

HANOI, Jan 26 (Reuters) - South Korean former Prime Minister Lee Hae-chan, a veteran politician and influential fixture on the country's road ​to democracy, died during an official visit to Vietnam's southern ‌hub of Ho Chi Minh City, both governments said.

Lee, 73 died on Sunday, after emergency ‌medical aid for a heart attack, a South Korean presidential advisory panel said in a statement.

"The country has lost a great mentor in the history of our democracy," President Lee Jae Myung said. "He dedicated his life to ⁠protecting and growing democratic ‌values through our turbulent modern history."

Lee spearheaded government reform as prime minister from 2004 to 2006. The seven-term former ‍member of parliament had started out as a student activist who was jailed in the 1970s for leading a democracy movement.

A firebrand who often clashed with political ​opponents, he was considered a shrewd strategist who helped four liberal ‌presidents, including the current incumbent, to win the office.

Lee's death turns a "chapter in our political history", the

conservative opposition People Power Party said in a condolence statement.

Vietnam's Prime Minister Pham Minh Chinh and other leaders offered condolences to South Korea and Lee's family.

The Southeast Asian nation's foreign ministry worked with ⁠city officials, among others, to ensure Lee ​received the best medical care, but the ​efforts were unavailing, because of the severity of his condition, it said in a statement.

Lee had arrived in Vietnam ‍on Thursday for a ⁠meeting of the panel, which advises the government on policy with North Korea.

He was the civilian head of the panel, known as ⁠the Peaceful Unification Advisory Council, with members both at home and overseas.

(Reporting by Khanh ‌Vu in Hanoi, Jack Kim in Seoul; Editing by Tom ‌Hogue, Jacqueline Wong and Clarence Fernandez)

 

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