SK chairman's wife decides to end marital life and seek asset division

By Lim Chang-won Posted : December 5, 2019, 10:28 Updated : December 5, 2019, 10:28
이미지 확대

SK Group Chairman Chey Tae-won (left) and his wife Roh So-young (right) [Yonhap Photo]


SEOUL -- The estranged wife of Chey Tae-won, the chairman of South Korea's third-largest conglomerate SK Group, changed her mind to accept a divorce after she launched a legal battle for an asset division, four years after the breakdown of their marital life was made public through Chey's revelation that he had a child out of wedlock.

Chey's assets exceed four trillion won ($3.4 billion), including an 18.44 percent stake in SK Holdings.

Chey, 59, filed a request with a Seoul court seeking a divorce settlement with his wife, Roh So-young, in 2017, after he admitted in a letter published by a local magazine in 2015 that he maintained an extramarital relationship while his marital life remained bumpy for more than 10 years. Roh, 58, had refused to accept a divorce.

In a Facebook post that came on Wednesday after she filed a lawsuit for an asset division, Roh disclosed her decision to end her marriage that began in 1988, saying she would go solo and find a new life because her son and two daughters have already grown up. As director of Art Center Nabi, a contemporary art gallery in Seoul, she has organized various exhibitions and cultural projects.
.
"The past years have been a time of trying to build and keep a family," Roh said. "Even when I had a hard and humiliating time, I waited with a ray of hope, but now I can't see any hope," she said, adding the rest of her life would be devoted to finding a way to contribute to society. "Now I think it's right to let my husband find the happiness he so desperately wants. I believed that I should protect my family even at the risk of my life, but now I want to expand 'home' into a larger community."

Roh So-young is the daughter of Roh Tae-woo, a former army general who served as president from 1988 to 1993 after joining a 1979 coup led by his military colleague and predecessor, Chun Doo-hwan. The two ex-presidents were convicted in 1996 of mutiny, treason and corruption for their roles in the coup and the bloody military crackdown on a pro-democracy uprising in the southern city of Gwangju in 1980. Both were released from prison in December 1997 on a presidential pardon.


 

Copyright ⓒ Aju Press All rights reserved.

0 comments
0 / 300

Are you sure you want to delete this comment?

Close

You can write comments after logging in.
Do you want to log in?

Close

You have already participated.

Close
기사 이미지 확대 보기
닫기