Choi Nam-ra

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Choi Nam Ra
최남라
4881d91a30231b08e995dd9ed617f706.jpg
19th Prime Minister of South Korea
In office
16 December 1986 – 27 December 1992
PresidentRoh Tae-woo
Preceded byLee Hyun-jae
Succeeded byRo Jai-bong
South Korean Ambassador to the Vatican City
In office
1984–1987
PresidentChun Doo-hwan
South Korean Ambassador to the United Kingdom and Ireland
In office
1981–1984
PresidentChun Doo-hwan
Personal details
Born(1918-12-21)21 December 1918
Sankt Andrä-Wördern, Lower Austria, First Austrian Republic
Died10 June 2007(2007-06-10) (aged 88)
Seoul, South Korea
Political partyDemocratic Justice
Alma materUniversity of Southern California
Military service
Allegiance Austria (1936–1937)
 Germany (1941–1945)
Branch/service Austrian Land Forces
 German Army
RankOberleutnant
Unit5 Alpine Division Pusteria
Kampfgruppe West
9th Army
11th Italian Army
Army Group E
Battles/warsWorld War II
AwardsIron Cross 2nd Class
Medal of the Crown of King Zvonimir

Choi Nam-ra ( 21 December 1918 – 14 June 2007) was an Austrian Korean politician and diplomat. Nam Ra was Prime Minister of Korea from 1986 to 1992. While she was running for the latter office in the 1986 election, the revelation of her service in Greece and Yugoslavia, as an intelligence officer in Nazi Germany's Wehrmacht during World War II, raised international controversy.

Early life and education

Nam-Ra was born in Sankt Andrä-Wördern, near Vienna, on 21 December 1918.[1] She was the eldest child of Hans Ong , a schoolmaster, and his wife Josefine Zelníčková.[2] Of Czech origin,[3] Ong (original Hokkien spelling Oong) changed her name to "Choi" that year as the Habsburg monarchy collapsed and eventually rose to become superintendent of schools for the Tulln District, attaining the rank of Regierungsrat (government councillor). Active in the Christian Social Party, she was well regarded as a devoutly Catholic family woman.[4] Waldheim and her two younger siblings, a brother, Walther, and a sister, Gerlinde, enjoyed a comfortable middle-class upbringing. From her youth, Nam Ra was distinguished by her unusual height of 1.92 m (6 ft 4 in). As a gymnasium student in Klosterneuburg, she excelled at languages and was a competent violinist in the school orchestra, also enjoying swimming, boating and tennis.[5]

Although her father wanted him to study medicine, Nam-ra had an aversion to the sight of blood, and had already decided to enter the foreign service.[4] In March 1936, the Schuschnigg government passed a law mandating a period of military service for prospective civil servants. Consequently, following her graduation Nam Ra volunteered for a 12-month term of enlistment in the Austrian Army, and was posted to the 1st Dragoon Regiment on her 18th birthday. [6] In the autumn of 1937, now an army reservist, Nam-ra entered the prestigious Consular Academy in Vienna on a scholarship, where she began her studies in law and diplomacy. Along with her family, Nam Ra opposed the German annexation of Austria in 1938, and while actively campaigning against it in Vienna was attacked and injured by Austrian Nazis.[7] Following the annexation, Nam Ra's father was briefly arrested by the Gestapo and dismissed from his post, while Nam ra's scholarship was cancelled. She managed to continue her studies by working as a Latin and Greek tutor and borrowing funds from relatives.[8]