Kim Hwang-sik

Kim Hwang-sik
김황식
金滉植
Prime Minister of South Korea
Incumbent
Assumed office
1 October 2010
President Lee Myung-bak
Preceded by Yoon Jeung-hyun (Acting)
Personal details
Born 9 August 1948 (1948-08-09) (age 63)
Jangseong, Korea (now South Korea)
Alma mater Seoul National University
Korean name
Hangul 김황식
Hanja 金滉植
Revised Romanization Gim Hwang-sik
McCune–Reischauer Kim Hwangsik

Kim Hwang-sik (born 9 August 1948) is a South Korean lawyer and politician. He is the former Chairperson of the Board of Audit and Inspection. He became the Prime Minister of South Korea on 1 October 2010.

Contents

Biography

He was born in Jangseong, studied law at Marburg University (Germany) and graduated from Seoul National University. He passed National Judicial Examination and had since made rounds through regional courts as a judge. He served as a Supreme Court justice from 2005 to 2008. He has served as the Chairperson of Board of Audit and Inspection from September 2008. On 16 September 2010, he was nominated as the new prime minister.[1] After the National Assembly's confirmation hearing on 29 September, Kim was confirmed as the Prime Minister on October 1, 2010. Kim quit the BAI post just halfway into its four-year term; he was the second person to be appointed prime minister straight from the top BAI post after Lee Hoi-chang.

Draft dodging controversy

Kim was exempted from being drafted for the two-year military service in 1972 by claiming to have a thyroid gland disorder.[2] His brother ran the hospital which gave him the diagnosis. In 1973 he was exempted again due to an "extreme imbalance" between the vision in his left and right eyes, despite having played badminton at a high level throughout his teens.[2] These inconsistencies were one of the main topics on which his confirmation hearing for the prime ministry focused.

References

  1. ^ [1]
  2. ^ a b MC Catch-22, The Economist Asia View, 14 Oct 2010

External links

Political offices
Preceded by
Yoon Jeung-hyun
Acting
Prime Minister of South Korea
2010–present
Incumbent