June 3 Resistance movement | |||
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Date | 3 June 1964 | ||
Location | |||
Caused by | Negotiation of normalization of diplomatic relations between Japan and South Korea | ||
Goals | Anti Treaty on Basic Relations between Korea and Japan | ||
Methods | Protest marches and civil disobedience | ||
Resulted in | President Park Chung-hee invokes Martial law and the protesters was suppressed.
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Parties | |||
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Lead figures | |||
no centralized leadership |
The June 3 resistance movement, also known as 6.3 resistance or the movement against the Korea-Japan negotiations (Korean: 한일협상 반대 운동, 6.3시위 or 6.3 항쟁) was initiated in June 1964 by students and citizens against the Park Chung Hee administration effort to negotiate the normalization of South Korea and Japan diplomatic relations.
In 1964, President Park Chung Hee secretly pushed for the Treaty on Basic Relations between Japan and the Republic of Korea to normalize diplomatic relations with Japan, which had been severed since 1945 with the aim of revitalizing the Korean economy. 6.3 resistance against Treaty on Basic Relations between Japan and the Republic of Korea were initiated in June 1964 by college students, ordinary citizens and non-government figures in opposition to the Park Chung Hee administration. On 3 June 1964, the Park Chung Hee administration declared martial law to suppress protests against a summit between Korea and Japan. The martial law declared at 10 p.m. on 3 June was terminated on 29 July. In the end, however, the government decided to agree with the Japanese government to push for normalization of Korea-Japan relations through the foreign ministers of Korea and Japan in Tokyo.[1]