Most Popular
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Opposition head pleads for support in ‘fight against Yoon dictatorship’
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Xi says he will consider S. Korea visit
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BTS' Suga begins military service
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Opposition party leader ends 24-day hunger strike for treatment
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Surveillance cameras to be a must in hospital operating rooms
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[Weekender] Behind the scenes of Korean food crazes
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US finalizes national security 'guardrails' for CHIPS funding
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S. Korea calls on Russia to 'transparently explain' its dealing with N. Korea amid suspected arms supply agreement
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[Herald Interview] ‘Another Body,’ a riveting documentary on devasting effects of deepfake porn
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Allies vow stern measures against Russia-N. Korea arms deal
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Korea, US, Japan to discuss security cooperation at trilateral summit
President Yoon Suk Yeol will depart Thursday for a landmark summit with the leaders of the United States and Japan at Camp David, Maryland, which aims to create a framework for trilateral security cooperation in the Indo-Pacific region. The wives of the three leaders will not accompany them to event. It will be the first standalone summit involving South Korea, the US and Japan. There have been 12 three-way summits in the past, but all have been held on the sidelines of a larger gathering. "
Aug. 13, 2023
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[70th Anniversary] After 70 years, S. Korea mulls ‘grand strategy’
The last 70 years have marked South Korea’s ascent to an economic power able to cope with threats from North Korea, its nuclear-armed neighbor that it has yet to sign a peace treaty with to resolve the 1950-53 Korean War. Seoul’s postwar efforts had relied on working with the US, the South’s biggest ally. In the early 1960s, aid from Washington accounted for 35 percent of Seoul’s budget and 73 percent of its defense spending. The 1965 agreement the South signed with Japan
Aug. 13, 2023
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‘Two-Korea’ unification increasingly favored
The majority of South Koreans favor a unified Korean Peninsula, but half of those prefer a model where the two Koreas remain separate, with each side able to freely cross the border, according to a survey released Friday. In a poll conducted by the National Unification Advisory Council from June 9-11, 52 percent of 1,000 South Korean respondents aged 19 and older considered keeping the two Koreas separate while allowing free travel across the border the best way to reunite the peninsula, which r
Aug. 13, 2023
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[70th Anniversary] Congratulatory messages from government leaders
Recognition from prominent figures in the government inspires The Korea Herald to strive for excellence in the publication’s reporting and the commitment to our readers. – Ed. Choo Kyung-ho, Deputy prime minister and finance minister I extend my warmest congratulations on the 70th anniversary of The Korea Herald. Born in the ruins of the Korean War in 1953, The Korea Herald has made a great contribution to raising the country’s profile worldwide while serving as a window to a
Aug. 13, 2023
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[70th Anniversary] Congratulatory message from President Yoon Suk Yeol on the 70th Anniversary of The Korea Herald
I offer heartfelt congratulations to The Korea Herald on the 70th anniversary of its founding. My profound appreciation goes to Mr. Jung Won-ju, chairman of Herald Corp., as well as its management and staff. I also extend congratulations to its readers. Founded in 1953 on Liberation Day, Aug. 15, The Korea Herald has served as a bridge between Korea and the international community while vividly reporting the Republic of Korea’s progress as the country overcame the ruins of war and impoveri
Aug. 13, 2023
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[Weekender] Retreats and reads: Glimpse into Korean presidential summers
In the sweltering heat of South Korean summers, even the most powerful figures in Korea -- its presidents -- yearn for summer respite. Delve into the history of presidential summer vacations, their reading rituals that give the public a sneak peek into their minds and the seemingly unbreakable jinx of interrupted summer breaks. Obligatory reading list South Korean presidents like to reveal their summer reading lists, and their book picks often become bestsellers for the season. From these summ
Aug. 12, 2023
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K-pop to the rescue: Troubled Jamboree to wrap up with concert
Over 40,000 young scouts have gathered at a stadium in western Seoul for a K-pop concert, marking the conclusion of this year's World Scout Jamboree, which encountered difficulties due to a heat wave, a tropical storm and insufficient preparations. The closing ceremony is set to commence at 5:30 p.m., before a K-Pop show from 7-9 p.m. The Jamboree campground was abandoned as Typhoon Khanun approached the site, which had already struggled to cope with a scorching heat wave and insufficient amenit
Aug. 11, 2023
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Ex-justice minister’s daughter indicted in college admissions scandal
The daughter of Cho Kuk, who served as justice minister for former President Moon Jae-in of the Democratic Party of Korea, was indicted on Thursday in the college admissions scandal that jailed her mother, Chung Kyung-shim. According to the prosecution, the former minister’s daughter Cho Min colluded with her mother in fabricating her own credentials as she applied for a medical school in Busan. Following the news of her indictment, Cho’s daughter said in a social statement on this d
Aug. 10, 2023
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Opposition leader Lee summoned for prosecution questioning over land development project
Prosecutors have summoned opposition leader Lee Jae-myung to appear for questioning over suspicions surrounding a land development project in Seongnam, just south of Seoul, during his previous term as the city's mayor, according to legal sources Thursday. The Seoul Central District Prosecutors Office is investigating allegations that Lee, the chairman of the main opposition Democratic Party, provided administrative favors to a private developer for the massive property project in Seongnam
Aug. 10, 2023
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S. Korea to participate in working group for Ukraine Peace Formula
South Korea will participate in a working group tasked with implementing a peace plan proposed by Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, a presidential official said Wednesday. The decision came while National Security Adviser Cho Tae-yong was visiting Saudi Arabia last weekend to take part in multinational peace talks concerning Ukraine. The meeting was attended by the national security advisers of 45 nations, with most of them expressing their commitment to ending the war in Ukraine and quic
Aug. 9, 2023
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Presidential office on 24-hour emergency duty over approaching typhoon
The office of President Yoon Suk Yeol was on 24-hour emergency duty Wednesday as a powerful typhoon was set to make landfall on the southeast coast and travel northward across the country. Typhoon Khanun has been forecast to arrive Thursday morning before moving slowly northward on a path that could bring it near the capital area and cause damage on a massive scale. Yoon might stay up overnight to oversee the response to the approaching typhoon, officials said. "The typhoon, which was initi
Aug. 9, 2023
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Bomb threat email against opposition leader prompts police search for explosives
A bomb threat email against South Korea's opposition leader Lee Jae-myung has led police to search the National Assembly, officials said Tuesday. The email, which threatens to bomb a library in Seoul if Lee is not killed by 3:34 p.m. Wednesday, was sent to a number of people, including officials in the Seoul municipal government, according to the police and the secretariat of the National Assembly. Police received the report around 4:45 p.m. and dispatched a bomb disposal team to conduct a
Aug. 8, 2023
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Korean public housing developer probed over shoddy safety
South Korea’s major public housing corporation is facing multiple probes into its residential buildings found to be missing steel reinforcement that is needed to yield higher strength and protect against corrosion. After the safety violations surfaced, the ruling People Power Party and the Yoon Suk Yeol administration vowed a crackdown on unsafe or illegal building practices in the construction industry. The ruling party lawmakers on Tuesday visited an apartment building in Gyeonggi Provin
Aug. 8, 2023
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Korea moves to plan B as Scouts decide on early exit from Saemangeum
All 36,000 scouts remaining at the World Scout Jamboree site in the Saemangeum reclaimed tidal flat area of Buan, North Jeolla Province will be withdrawing from the campsite starting on Tuesday morning as precautionary measure for a strong typhoon approaching the peninsula, the government said Monday. The participants will start withdrawing sequentially from 10 a.m. on Tuesday and move to the metropolitan area, as Typhoon Khanun is likely to hit the east coast of South Korea on Thursday. "A
Aug. 7, 2023
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[Bills in Focus] TV license fee, 3rd party calculation of patent damages, more foreign investment benefits
Proposed bill: Partial Amendment to the Broadcasting Act Proposed by Rep. Park Sung-joong (People Power Party) ● Currently, all people who possess a television receiver must pay a TV license fee, which is used to fund the Korea Broadcasting System. However, this regulation has been criticized for being unfair to those who do not subscribe to KBS broadcasts. Accordingly, this amendment sets rational standards for determining who is liable for TV license fees by exempting those who do not receive
Aug. 7, 2023
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Yoon's approval inches up for 2nd consecutive week
President Yoon Suk Yeol's approval rating inched up for the second consecutive week to 37.5 percent, a poll showed Monday. In the poll of 2,532 eligible voters conducted by Realmeter from Monday to Friday last week, the positive assessment of Yoon's performance advanced 0.2 percentage point from the previous week, while the disapproval of Yoon's performance dropped 0.2 percentage point to 59.3 percent. The rise in the positive assessment mostly came from respondents in their 60s a
Aug. 7, 2023
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[Newsmaker] Mass stabbings prompt demand for more power among police
South Korea, terrorized by a series of stabbing sprees all over the country in the past month, is pondering if its police need more liberty in deploying force when confronting a suspect. Earlier this month President Yoon Suk Yeol said that the country’s “entire police force would be mobilized” to prevent the recurrence of stabbing attacks at random. But police officers on the front lines complain they are being held liable for use of force even when judged to be necessary on th
Aug. 6, 2023
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S. Korea to allow up to 30 biz people each time to Ukraine on exceptions for reconstruction projects
South Korea has decided to allow up to 30 businesspeople to visit Ukraine each time for potential projects for reconstruction and recovery under special travel exceptions, officials and industry sources familiar with the matter said Sunday. Seoul has expressed its intent to actively participate in helping to rebuild the war-torn country in the wake of the war with Russia, with the business community in infrastructure and other sectors also aligning with the move. Earlier this month, officials sa
Aug. 6, 2023
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Yoon orders unlimited air-conditioned buses for Jamboree participants
President Yoon Suk Yeol instructed the government to provide an unlimited number of air-conditioned buses and refrigerator trucks to protect participants of the World Scout Jamboree suffering from the heat wave. He also approved using the government’s reserve funds to provide aid for the event, Yoon’s office said Friday. Prime Minister Han Duck-soo chaired an unscheduled Cabinet meeting at Yoon’s request to discuss the budget for the annual Jamboree, which kicked off Wednesday
Aug. 4, 2023
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Opposition party apologizes after suggesting elderly shouldn’t vote
South Korea’s main opposition party on Thursday apologized after a lawmaker and key official suggested older people are not as deserving of the right to vote on decisions about the future. Kim Eun-kyung, who heads the Democratic Party of Korea’s reform committee, visited the office of the senior citizens’ association in Seoul’s central Yongsan district and apologized for saying earlier that older people’s votes should not count as much as votes from younger people.
Aug. 3, 2023