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A undated file photo shows South Korea’s President Park Geun-hye (right, back row) with her late father and former President Park Chung-hee (centre, mother Yook Young-soo (left), sister and brother during her school days. File photo: EPA

‘I have lost my parents in the most excruciatingly painful way’: South Korea's president gets personal in US missile system row

Park Geun-hye responds to domestic opposition to planned THAAD anti-missile system as China worries radar will be able to track its own military capabilities

President Park Geun-hye on Tuesday evoked memories of her parents’ assassination as she hit back at growing domestic opposition to the planned deployment of an advanced US anti-missile system in South Korea.

The defence ministry announced last month that the Terminal High Altitude Area Defence system, or THAAD, will be installed in Seongju - a rural county about 200 kilometres southeast of Seoul - by the end of next year to supposedly protect the country from North Korea.

The also decision drew a stern rebuke from China’s foreign ministry, which said the system’s powerful radars threaten its national security and warned it would take “necessary measures to safeguard” its interests in the region.

South Korean President Park Geun-hye presides over a recent meeting of the National Security Council (NSC) to discuss the anti-missile system. Photo: EPA

Protesting Seongju residents have also alleged that the system’s powerful radar poses health and environmental hazards, while opposition lawmakers have been less than supportive of the move.

At a cabinet meeting Park voiced frustration at the objections to what she insisted was an “unchangeable” decision to deploy the system.

“If we cannot take basic defensive steps like deploying THAAD, how can we protect the country and the people?” she said in remarks posted on her official website.

“I have lost my parents in the most excruciatingly painful way. My only remaining calling is to safeguard the country and people from various threats,” she added.

Around 2,000 residents of Seongju County protest in Seoul in July. Photo: Kyodo

Park’s father, the former president and military strongman Park Chung-hee, was shot dead by his own intelligence chief in 1979.

Her mother was killed in 1974 during an earlier assassination attempt on her father by a North Korean sympathiser.

Park Geun-hye never married or had children and once proclaimed herself wedded to the nation and its welfare.

Seongju residents react to an irritant agent used by police to disperse a crowd blocking a vehicle carrying Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn on a visit to explain the deployment the THAAD anti-missile system. Photo: EPA

While promising to listen to the complaints of the Seongju residents, the president warned against listening to “strange and groundless rumours rather than scientific evidence” about the THAAD deployment.

“I ask the political circle to gather their wisdom and efforts to prevent internal division and conflict,” she added.

South Korea is planning to set up the world’s most advanced missile defence system, known by its acronym THAAD, in the South, a move that has also angered China. Photo: AFP

Tensions on the divided Korean peninsula have been running high since Pyongyang carried out its fourth nuclear test in January, followed by a series of ballistic missile tests.

North Korea has threatened to take “physical action” against the THAAD deployment, saying any South Korean ports and airfields hosting US military “hardware” would become a target.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Park gets personal in thaad row
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