Seoul mayor laid to rest [PHOTOS]

A framed portrait of Park Won-soon arrives at Seoul City Hall, the venue for his funeral, Monday morning. Yonhap

Friends, family and supporters gathered in pouring rain Monday to say their final goodbyes to Seoul Mayor Park Won-soon, a prominent human rights lawyer and civic activist who was regarded as a potential candidate for the next presidential race.

The funeral was also streamed live online as a precaution against the new coronavirus.

Following an hours-long search involving hundreds of police and rescue officers, the three-term mayor was found dead at Mount Bugak in central Seoul on Friday. The city government later released a handwritten note from Park, who said he was "sorry" to everyone.

His abrupt death came as a shock to the city's 10 million population and the whole country.

While supporters mourned his untimely death, the incident also caused a controversy following reports that one of Park's former secretaries had filed a criminal complaint of sexual harassment just two days before his death.

More than half a million people signed an online petition asking the funeral not to be a "mayoral funeral," citing the sexual harassment allegations, and a political fight surrounding the case erupted, in some cases seen as posing a threat to the former secretary.

Some even went on to file a petition with the Seoul Administrative Court to prevent the city government from holding the five-day public funeral. The court dismissed the petition on Sunday evening, allowing the funeral to go ahead as planned.

Despite the political wrangling, Monday's funeral service was held in a relatively solemn and low-key manner at Seoul City Hall in the city center. Roughly 100 family members, friends, city officials and politicians attended the service, which started at 8:30 a.m.

A supporter of the late mayor wails in front of Seoul City Hall, Monday. / Yonhap

Citizens watch a funeral procession for Park outside the city hall, Monday. / Yonhap

A hearse carrying Park's coffin leaves the city hall after the funeral, Monday. Park's body was to be cremated at Seoul Memorial Park in southern Seoul and laid to rest in his home town of Changnyeong, South Gyeongsang Province. / Yonhap

Supporters carrying umbrellas stood outside the City Hall building as they watched the online funeral service live to mourn the late mayor.

Park's funeral preparation committee said Sunday that the funeral would be streamed live online "in line with the principle of cooperating with the COVID-19 control efforts and be held in a simple manner."

"My friend Park Won-soon has been with me for the past 40 years. It was just a day before (his death) that I had discussed property market measures with him. ... (I'm) in grief and misery," ruling Democratic Party chairman Lee Hae-chan, said in his mourning speech, calling Park a "symbol of South Korea's civil activism."

City officials voiced regrets about the mayor, who had led the city's affairs for nearly a decade since he was elected in a 2011 by-election. He was re-elected in 2014 and 2018, with his term set to end in 2022.

"The road of the 'citizens that (Park) had rightly defended for 3,180 days has become a standard not only for Seoul, but for the Republic of Korea," said acting Mayor Seo Jeong-hyup said.

"His last request was to protect the people from COVID-19 and to pioneer ways for Seoul to become a standard city in the post-coronavirus age," Seo said, vowing that the city's 75,000 employees would carry on.

Park's daughter, Da-in, who spoke on behalf of the bereaved family, thanked everyone who visited the funeral to mourn and urged the people of Seoul "who have filled his spot" to help make Seoul a better place.

Park's body was to be cremated at Seoul Memorial Park in southern Seoul and laid to rest in his home town of Changnyeong, South Gyeongsang Province. (Yonhap)


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