Alex Gillis
White Belt
- Joined
- Apr 26, 2009
- Messages
- 8
- Reaction score
- 0
Hi,
Has anyone been following the coverage about Kukkiwon president Lee Seng-wan and South Korea putting the Kukkiwon under government control? I'm a black belt in TKD who wrote a book about TKD's history (A Killing Art: The Untold History of Tae Kwon Do). I just recently heard about Lee's presidency. In case you don't know, he's a former Korean godfather who served time in prison for various criminal activities, including TKD shenanigans. Even after all I've seen, I was surprised to see that he's president. There seemed to be some effort put into cleaning up TKD.
In 1987, under a South Korean dictatorship, Lee was the godfather of a gang hired by Korean politicians to attack a new democratic party. Fifty hoodlums, backed by the Korean Central Intelligence Agency, descended on twenty meetings, destroying furniture and attacking people with clubs. Korean media extensively covered the story. Lee Seng-Wan (also spelled Seung Wan and Sung Wan) had been a national sparring champion in the 1960s and had become head of the Jidokwan, one of the nine gyms that had formed Kim Un-Yong's World Taekwondo Federation (WTF). Lee was sentenced to 1.5 years in prison for his role in the 1987 attack -- called the Yongpal Incident.
That was only the first of a couple of illegal activities that involved martial artists.
Does anyone know much about the Lee situation and South Korea's response? I'm new to martialtalk.
Alex Gillis
Has anyone been following the coverage about Kukkiwon president Lee Seng-wan and South Korea putting the Kukkiwon under government control? I'm a black belt in TKD who wrote a book about TKD's history (A Killing Art: The Untold History of Tae Kwon Do). I just recently heard about Lee's presidency. In case you don't know, he's a former Korean godfather who served time in prison for various criminal activities, including TKD shenanigans. Even after all I've seen, I was surprised to see that he's president. There seemed to be some effort put into cleaning up TKD.
In 1987, under a South Korean dictatorship, Lee was the godfather of a gang hired by Korean politicians to attack a new democratic party. Fifty hoodlums, backed by the Korean Central Intelligence Agency, descended on twenty meetings, destroying furniture and attacking people with clubs. Korean media extensively covered the story. Lee Seng-Wan (also spelled Seung Wan and Sung Wan) had been a national sparring champion in the 1960s and had become head of the Jidokwan, one of the nine gyms that had formed Kim Un-Yong's World Taekwondo Federation (WTF). Lee was sentenced to 1.5 years in prison for his role in the 1987 attack -- called the Yongpal Incident.
That was only the first of a couple of illegal activities that involved martial artists.
Does anyone know much about the Lee situation and South Korea's response? I'm new to martialtalk.
Alex Gillis