Lee Myung-bak

President

Birthday December 19, 1941

Birth Sign Sagittarius

Birthplace Osaka, Japan

Age 82 years old

Nationality Japan

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1929

His parents emigrated to Japan in 1929, nineteen years after the Japanese annexation of Korea.

Lee's father, Lee Chung-u (이충우; 李忠雨), was employed as a farm labourer in rural Japan, and his mother, Chae Tae-won (채태원; 蔡太元), was a housewife.

He was the fifth of seven children.

1941

Lee Myung-bak (born 19 December 1941) often referred to by his initials MB, is a South Korean businessman and former politician who served as 10th (17th election) president of South Korea from 2008 to 2013.

Lee Myung-bak was born 19 December 1941, in Osaka, Japan.

1945

In 1945, after the end of World War II, his family returned to his father's hometown of Pohang, in North Gyeongsang Province, then an American-occupied portion of the Korean Peninsula.

Lee's sister, Lee Ki-sun, believed that they smuggled themselves into the country to avoid having the officials confiscate the property they acquired in Japan.

However, their ship was wrecked off the coast of Tsushima island.

They lost all their belongings and barely survived.

Lee personally witnessed the deaths of his older sister and a younger brother, who were killed in the bombardment of Pohang, during the Korean War.

Lee attended night school at Dongji Commercial High School in Pohang and received a scholarship.

A year after graduation, Lee gained admission to Korea University.

1964

In 1964, during his third year in college, Lee was elected president of the student council.

That year, Lee participated in student demonstrations against President Park Chung Hee's Seoul-Tokyo Talks, taking issue with Japanese restitution for the colonization of the Korean Peninsula.

He was charged with plotting insurrection and was sentenced to five years' probation and three years' imprisonment by the Supreme Court of Korea.

He served a little under three months of his sentence at the Seodaemun Prison in Seoul.

In his autobiography, Lee wrote that he was discharged from Korea's mandatory military service due to a diagnosis of acute bronchiectasis while at the Nonsan Training Facility.

1965

In 1965, Lee started work at Hyundai Construction, the company which was awarded Korea's first-ever overseas construction project, a $5.2 million contract to build the Pattani-Narathiwat Highway in Thailand.

1968

Shortly after he was hired by the company, Lee was sent to Thailand to participate in the project, which was successfully completed in March 1968.

Lee returned to Korea and was subsequently given charge of Hyundai's heavy machinery plant in Seoul.

It was during his three decades with the Hyundai Group that Lee earned the nickname "Raging Bulldozer".

On one occasion, he completely dismantled a malfunctioning bulldozer to study its mechanics and figure out how to repair it, only to run it over with another bulldozer that was often operated by Lee himself.

Lee became a company director at the age of 29, five years after he joined the company.

2002

Before his presidency, he was the CEO of Hyundai Engineering and Construction, and the mayor of Seoul from 2002 to 2006.

He is married to Kim Yoon-ok and has three daughters and one son.

His older brother, Lee Sang-deuk, is a South Korean politician.

He is a Christian attending Somang Presbyterian Church.

2010

Under Lee, South Korea increased its visibility and influence in the global scene, resulting in the hosting of the 2010 G-20 Seoul summit.

However, significant controversy remains in Korea regarding high-profile government initiatives which have caused some factions to engage in civil opposition and protest against the incumbent government and President Lee's Saenuri Party (formerly the Grand National Party).

The reformist faction within the Saenuri Party was at odds with Lee.

2011

Lee is a graduate of Korea University and received an honorary degree from Paris Diderot University in 2011.

Lee altered the South Korean government's approach to North Korea, preferring a more hardline strategy in the wake of increased provocation from the North, though he was supportive of regional dialogue with Russia, China and Japan.

2013

He ended his five-year term on 24 February 2013, and was succeeded by Park Geun-hye.

2016

Lee's arrest occurred roughly a year after the arrest of former president Park Geun-Hye, who was arrested on charges stemming from the 2016 South Korean political scandal.

2018

On 22 March 2018, Lee was arrested on charges of bribery, embezzlement, and tax evasion alleged to have occurred during his presidency.

Prosecutors accused Lee of receiving bribes totaling 11 billion won and channeling assets of 35 billion won to an illicit slush fund.

Shortly before his arrest, Lee posted a handwritten statement on Facebook denying the charges.

Lee was convicted on 5 October 2018 and sentenced to 15 years in prison.

2020

On 29 October 2020, the Korean Supreme Court upheld a 17-year sentence against Lee given to him by an appellate court.

On 27 December 2022, President Yoon Suk-yeol granted Lee a special pardon, cancelling the remaining 15 years of the sentence.