User:Dckewon5131/송찬도

Song Chan-do (7 November 1893 – ?) was an official of the Japanese occupation.

Life
He is from Pyeonggang-gun, Gangwon-do, and dropped out of Gyeongseong Jeil High School. Since 1920, he has served as an official of the Joseon Governor-General in Gangwon-do and Gyeongsangnam-do. While working at the governor's office in Gyeongsangnam-do, he was promoted to governor of the Governor-General's Office and appointed as governor of Goseong-gun.

While working as a governor of Goseong-gun, he became a high-ranking Japanese official and became a high-ranking official. As he was selected as an official of the Foreign Affairs Department of the Governor-General of the Joseon Dynasty, he was appointed as a deputy consul stationed in Fengtian, and served as an executive secretary of the Immigration Committee under the Governor-General. He worked as a diplomat in Manchuria and was mainly in charge of tasks related to the migration of Koreans to Manchuria. Since then, he has served in important positions, including the head of the Ministry of Internal Affairs and Communications.

He was very clever and is diligent It remains said that it was good at socializing, and it has been trusted by the Governor-General for dealing with complicated situations between Manchuria, Japan, and Joseon. In 1938, the magazine Samcheon-ri commented that he must soon be promoted to governor as a promising Korean official.

In 1943, two years before the end of the Pacific War, it was honored as a participatory hall in North Hamgyong Province. He received several medals from the Japanese government and was ranked fifth in the rank of King Hun of this time.

Song Chan-do served as a high-ranking official at the Governor-General's Office Until early 1945, just before the end of the war, he was active in control organizations such as the National Mobilization General Assembly, but after the end of the war, he continued to act as a leader after the U.S. military administration began. In October 1945, he attended a promotional meeting to compile the History of the Korean Independence Movement, and organized an organization called Jeon Jae-in Korean Association to support Koreans returning from abroad. He also arranged for the return of a Korean who was in Manchuria.

Among the 708 pro-Japanese groups announced by the National Assembly in 2002, it was included in the Participatory Hall and the Joseon Governor-General's Office, the bureaucracy and overseas section of the list of prospective pro-Japanese dictionaries compiled by the Institute for National Affairs in 2008, and 705 pro-general activities announced by the Committee on Pro-