1985: Major Zin Mo, failed assassin
April 6th, 2016 Headsman
On this date in 1985, North Korean Major Zin Mo was hanged in Buma’s Insein prison.
Eighteen months earlier nearly to the day, a huge bomb ripped apart Rangoon’s monumental mausoleum tribute to martyred founding hero Aung San.
The bomb was meant for visiting South Korean president Chun Doo-hwan,* who planned to lay a wreath at the site. But the infernal machine detonated too early, sparing its target — though 21 others lost their lives, 17 of them Korean, including Foreign Minister Lee Beom-seok.
The ensuing manhunt turned up three North Korean commandos, each of whom had been detailed short-fused grenades to commit spectacular suicide to evade capture.
Zin Kee-Chu started pulling stuff out of his bag. First a pile of money came out and while the policemen were temporarily distracted by the cash he then pulled out a hand grenade and detonated right there.
Their hand grenades had short 1 second fuses unlike our M-36 hand grenades with the longer 4 seconds fuses. So the explosion was immediate and some policemen and Captain Zin Kee-Chu himself were killed there. (Source)
But Major Zin Mo survived his explosives, albeit with devastating injuries, and fellow-captain Kang Min Chul lacked the fortitude to make the suicide attempt at all. Under none-too-gentle interrogation, Zin Mo kept his mouth shut and accepted his secret execution for the People’s Republic. Zin Kee-Chu didn’t have any better stomach to hang for his country than to blow himself up for it; he didn’t hang and lived out his life in Burmese captivity, having apparently cut a deal to tell all in exchange for his life.
There’s a phenomenal firsthand retrospective on these events, liberally illustrated, here, written by a present-day Burmese exile who was in Rangoon on the day the mausoleum was bombed.
* Chun was the guy who emerged in charge after Korea’s intelligence chief bizarrely assassinated President Park Chung-hee in 1979.
On this day..
- 1844: John Gavin, the first European hanged in Western Australia - 2020
- 1196: William FitzOsbert, medieval rebel - 2019
- 1489: Hans Waldmann, mayor of Zurich - 2018
- 1724: Sister Geltruda and Fra Romualdo, at a Palermo auto de fe - 2017
- 1772: Mary Hilton - 2015
- 1571: James Hamilton, Archbishop of St. Andrews and uncle of a crack shot - 2014
- 1752: Mary Blandy, "forgiveness powder" - 2013
- 1857: Francis Richeux, witnessed by Tolstoy - 2012
- 1945: Kim Malthe-Bruun, Yours, but not forever - 2011
- 1199: Pierre Basile, marksman - 2010
- 1758: William Page, forgotten highwayman - 2009
- 1888: Jochin Henry Timmerman, "don't let them take you alive" - 2008
Entry Filed under: 20th Century,Assassins,Attempted Murder,Burma,Capital Punishment,Death Penalty,Execution,Hanged,History,Korea,Murder,North Korea,Notable for their Victims,Soldiers,Terrorists,Torture