I hope this doesnÂ’t make me the party spoiler here, but should we be surprised that the Korean government is interested in taking over or shaking up the Kukkiwon? Would the Korean Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism really want the old Kukkiwon guard to be anywhere near the proposed $185 million Taekwondo Park in Muju? This, at a time when the Korean government is using Taekwondo as one of its main diplomatic tools and promoting it as a major cultural symbol, with added expectation that the new park will draw millions of more tourists? I doubt it.
In a broader context, the Taekwondo Park appears to have become the backdrop over which a major WTF Taekwondo schism could occur if some powerful force does not step in. The old guard (rapidly aging old Kwan loyalists, politicians and gangsters) whoÂ’ve always sought total control of the Kukkiwon and its money are standing their ground. The younger Taekwondo academics/bureaucrats at the WTF are seeking global credibility and dominance over Taekwondo. Meanwhile, the real Taekwondo grandmasters at the Kukkiwon and dojangs in Korea and overseas are deeply frustrated and also want a piece of the action.
While Kim Un-Yong’s story is well known, serious questions linger about whether Seung-Wan Lee (sometimes spelled Sang-Wan Lee, Seng-Wan Lee, and Seung-Hwan Lee), should or will ever become a permanent Kukkiwon president. Is his “acting” capacity even real? Like Kim, Grandmaster Lee has tons of negative baggage, which should not sit well with Kukkiwon supporters. The published accounts of his brushes with Korean law include:
1. Grand master Lee was arrested and later imprisoned for using strong arm tactics to break up an opposition pro-democracy political rally in 1987.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/3293927.stm
2. In 2000, Grandmaster Lee, then vice president of the Korea Taekwondo Association (KTA) was accused of embezzlement, a charge that derailed his chances of running for KTAÂ’s presidency.
http://www.mookas.us/media_view.asp?news_no=529
3. In 2003 Grandmaster Lee, then an adviser of the KTA, was indicted for allegedly using violence to influence KTA election and obtaining bribes from Taekwondo equipment manufacturers. He was convicted for those crimes in 2004.
http://joongangdaily.joins.com/article/view.asp?aid=2068549