Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Choe Chang-ik (Korean: 최창익; Hanja: 崔昌益, 1896–1960) was a Korean politician in the Japanese colonial era. He was a member of the Korean independence movement. He was also known by the names Choe Chang-sok (최창석; 崔昌錫), Choe Chang-sun (최창순; 崔昌淳), Choe Tong-u (최동우; 崔東宇), and Ri Kon-u.

  2. Apr 25, 2012 · After this failure near the neck of the Tumen River, Choe turned back south and returned to Seoul. “The reason that Choe Chang Ik left Onsong for Seoul,” Kim wrote,” was that he knew we disliked factions and did not compromise with factionalists like him.”

  3. Aug 7, 2017 · Now, he faced a united opposition that included important Soviet Koreans led by weakened but still prominent deputy premier Pak Chang-ok and leaders of the Chinese (or Yan’an) faction, in particular Choe Chang-ik.

  4. Choe Chang-ik (Hangul: 최창익, hanja: 崔昌益, 1896 in Onsong County – 1960[1] in Pyongyang) was a Korean Independence activist, soldier, Social Movements.[2] after name was Choe Chang-sok (최창석, 崔昌錫), Choe Chang-sun (최창순, 崔昌淳), Choe Tong-u (최동우, 崔東宇[2]), Ri Kon-u (이건우, 李建宇).

  5. When the plenum finally opened on August 30, Choe Chang-ik made a speech attacking Kim Il Sung for concentrating the power of the party and the state in his own hands as well as criticising the party line on industrialisation which ignored widespread starvation among the North Korean people.

  6. Choe Chang-ik was a Korean politician in the Japanese colonial era. He was a member of the Korean independence movement. He was also known by the names Choe Chang-sok, Choe Chang-sun, Choe Tong-u, and Ri Kon-u.

  7. Choe Chang-ik, one of the Chinese-trained theoreticians who came to North Korea with the "Yenan group," is the author of the chapters on the history of the Korean Communist Party in the Choson Minjok Haebang Tuchangsa (History of the Korean People's Struggle for Liberation), a product of writers