Most Popular
-
1
Actor Jung Woo-sung admits to being father of model Moon Ga-bi’s child
-
2
Wealthy parents ditch Korean passports to get kids into international school
-
3
Man convicted after binge eating to avoid military service
-
4
First snow to fall in Seoul on Wednesday
-
5
Final push to forge UN treaty on plastic pollution set to begin in Busan
-
6
Industry experts predicts tough choices as NewJeans' ultimatum nears
-
7
Nvidia CEO signals Samsung’s imminent shipment of AI chips
-
8
Korea to hold own memorial for forced labor victims, boycotting Japan’s
-
9
Job creation lowest on record among under-30s
-
10
Opposition chief acquitted of instigating perjury
-
S. Korea re-elected as member of U.N. economic-social council
South Korea was re-elected as a member of the United Nations' Economic and Social Council, which oversees the majority of the international organization's financial resources, the foreign ministry said Thursday.In a vote at a U.N. general meeting that took place a day earlier, Seoul won the membership to the council for the 2014-15 period, along with three other Asian Pacific countries: China, Bangladesh and Kazakhstan, the ministry said. In the same vote, 14 other countries from different regio
Oct. 31, 2013
-
[Graphic News] Global terrorism fatalities
The number of terrorist attacks and fatalities soared to a record high in 2012. More than 8,500 terrorist attacks in 85 countries killed nearly 15,500 people last year.
Oct. 30, 2013
-
Korean FM calls for watershed in Seoul-Tokyo relations
South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se said Tuesday that Japan having an accurate perception of historical events will serve as a crucial watershed to restore frayed relations between the two countries. "A turning point is needed to make qualitative changes in Seoul-Tokyo relations," Yoon said during a seminar with S. Korean and Japanese journalists in Seoul. The minister further said the Japanese government should realize that a distorted historical view is one of the most crucial factors h
Oct. 29, 2013
-
Japan’s push for collective self-defense stirs dispute
Japan’s push for the right to collective self-defense is posing a tricky question to regional powers: whether it is pursuing militarism that would threaten peace, or seeking its suitable security role that would contribute to regional and global stability.Seoul and Beijing, two major victims of Japan’s past imperialism, are wary of any possibility of its military recrudescence, while a financially strained Washington apparently welcomes Tokyo’s desire to assume more security responsibilities.A
Oct. 29, 2013
-
U.S. passes ball to Japan on 'collective self-defense' issue
Apparently walking a tightrope between its two key regional allies -- South Korea and Japan, the Obama administration continued efforts Monday not to be drawn into a brewing controversy over Tokyo's move to expand its military role.Japan's conservative Abe government is working to change the interpretation of the pacifist Constitution to allow the nation to exercise the right to "collective self-defense."It would allow Japan, long restricted to self-defense, to use force against a military attac
Oct. 29, 2013
-
[Photo News] Tee off in Herald-KYJ Tour Campionship
Oct. 28, 2013
-
1,500 Koreans forced to work for Japanese firms in Sakhalin during colonial rule
Almost 1,500 Koreans were forced to work for what are now some of Japan‘s largest conglomerates during the Japanese occupation of the Korean Peninsula on Russia’s far eastern island of Sakhalin, a government report showed Monday.The report, drawn up by a government committee tasked with supporting victims of forced labor during Japan‘s 1910-45 colonial rule over the Korean Peninsula, showed that 1,469 Koreans were forced to work at plants belonging to the Japanese firms now known as Mitsubishi a
Oct. 28, 2013
-
Seoul asks U.S. to clarify spying allegations
The South Korean government has requested a reply from the United States on whether South Korea was one of the 35 countries whose leaders were reportedly wiretapped by the U.S. intelligence agency, an official said Sunday.“We are checking with the U.S. side for verification,” the government official said. “The government is closely following the issue and is determined to respond strictly.” The official said Seoul has not yet received any answer from the U.S. The British daily the Guardian had p
Oct. 27, 2013
-
Seoul seeks to buy advanced U.S. missiles
South Korea seeks to procure 112 units of advanced U.S. patriot missiles worth $404 million as part of efforts to establish its own air defense system to deter North Korea’s increasing missile threats. To be launched in the early 2020s, the Korea Air and Missile Defense program is a low-tier, multiple-interception shield designed to strike incoming missiles at an altitude of 40-50 kilometers.The U.S. Defense Security Cooperation Agency said it notified Congress on Friday that Seoul sounded out t
Oct. 27, 2013
-
Korea’s Dokdo video uses unauthorized clips from NHK
The Foreign Ministry came under fire Sunday for unauthorized use of clips from Japanese broadcaster NHK in its promotional video on the Dokdo islets. The ministry removed the 12-minute video last Friday from its website and YouTube as the public broadcaster complained that the film uses without permission some 10-second scenes from its 2011 drama depicting the Russo-Japanese war. The promotional piece was created by a private contractor. Ministry officials said they plan to upload it again after
Oct. 27, 2013
-
S. Korea, U.S. to discuss six-party talks on N.K.
Top nuclear negotiators of South Korea and the U.S. plan to meet early next month in Washington to discuss ways to achieve progress on ending North Korea’s nuclear program through long-stalled dialogue. Cho Tae-yong, the Foreign Ministry’s special representative for Korea peninsula peace and security affairs, is to have talks with Glyn Davies, U.S. special representative for North Korea policy, as early as in the first week of November. The exact schedule will be finalized shortly, ministry offi
Oct. 27, 2013
-
Envoys take in autumn air with train ride, temple stay
Some 40 participants, including foreign envoys and their families from a dozen countries, took part in a special temple stay trip on Friday and Saturday that included a scenic train ride through the mountainous environs around Buncheon Village in Bonghwa County, North Gyeongsang Province. Dubbed the “V-Road Trekking Festival,” Herald Corporation invited members of the diplomatic community on the two-day, one-night adventure to enjoy the crisp Autumn weather, and to introduce Korean Seon Buddhism
Oct. 27, 2013
-
S. Korea, Saudi Arabia discuss barriers to trade
Saudi Arabia’s minister of commerce and industry and his South Korean counterpart discussed ways to expand the bilateral trade relationship beyond supplying South Korea with its energy needs on Oct. 20 during a five-day visit to Seoul.South Korean investment in construction has contributed a lot to the kingdom’s development but what is needed now are investments in automobiles, electronics and information technology, said Saudi Minister of Commerce and Industry Tawfiq Al-Rabiah during the meeti
Oct. 27, 2013
-
Pakistani leader visits Seoul to upgrade legislative ties
The chairman of Pakistan’s Senate, Syed Nayyar Hussain Bokhari, discussed upgrading bilateral ties through legislative exchanges in a meeting with National Assembly Speaker Kang Chang-hee in Seoul on Tuesday, during a four-day visit here.Bokhari said direct interaction between lawmakers of the two countries could help generate better understanding and cement stronger ties, during an interview with The Korea Herald in Seoul on Tuesday. Bokhari led the five-member delegation from the upper chamber
Oct. 27, 2013
-
Panama aims bigger with iconic canal
When it was completed in 1914, the Panama Canal was heralded as an engineering marvel. Its construction ― a 50-mile cut through mountainous and malarial terrain ― was a decade-long project, but the gravity-fed water locks that could lift freighters and ocean liners 85 feet up from sea level and across the isthmus were a technological feat the likes of which the world had never seen.But that was then. Now, this historic achievement is not what it used to be, according to Panamanian Ambassador to
Oct. 27, 2013
-
S. Korea, Caribbean underscore multilateral issues at tourism meet
More than a dozen Caribbean and South Korean vice ministers and senior governmental and inter-governmental officials gathered to boost tourism in their respective nations during a Korea-Caribbean partnership forum in Seoul on Tuesday.Dubbed the “Third High-Level Forum on Korea-Caribbean Partnership” and co-hosted by First Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Kim Kyou-hyun and First Vice Minister of Culture, Sports and Tourism Cho Hyun-jae, the regional meet up showcased recent government efforts to
Oct. 27, 2013
-
Images show new work at N.K. nuke test site: U.S. think tank
North Korea has undertaken new work to make two new tunnel entrances at its nuclear test site in an apparent effort to prepare for future underground detonations, a U.S. think tank said Wednesday, citing satellite imagery. Commercial aerial photos from Sept. 27 suggest continued excavation in the western part of the Punggye site, where the communist state detonated fission bombs in 2009 and February this year, according to the U.S.-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced Internationa
Oct. 27, 2013
-
Korea to boost cooperation with China against Japan: ambassador
BEIJING (Yonhap News) -- South Korea plans to forge closer diplomatic cooperation with China to jointly counter reinforced Japanese moves to lay claims to Seoul's easternmost islets of Dokdo, the South Korean ambassador in Beijing said Saturday.Ambassador Kwon Young-se made the remarks at an annual parliamentary audit on the embassy as Japan is stepping up its global PR campaign for its assertions of sovereignty over Dokdo.China is also in an acute territorial dispute with Japan over a set of is
Oct. 26, 2013
-
Pyongyang accepts South lawmakers’ visit to Gaeseong
North Korea on Thursday accepted a request by South Korean lawmakers to visit Gaeseong, raising hopes that momentum will pick up for the joint factory park whose recently resumed operations are suffering after a five-month freeze.Twenty-four members of the National Assembly’s foreign affairs and unification committee have applied for a one-day trip to the border town industrial zone on Oct. 30 as part of an ongoing parliamentary audit. The acceptance was delivered to the newly launched permanent
Oct. 24, 2013
-
[Photo News] GE Chief
Oct. 24, 2013