Most Popular
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Actor Jung Woo-sung admits to being father of model Moon Ga-bi’s child
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Wealthy parents ditch Korean passports to get kids into international school
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Man convicted after binge eating to avoid military service
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First snow to fall in Seoul on Wednesday
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Final push to forge UN treaty on plastic pollution set to begin in Busan
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Korea to hold own memorial for forced labor victims, boycotting Japan’s
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Nvidia CEO signals Samsung’s imminent shipment of AI chips
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Industry experts predicts tough choices as NewJeans' ultimatum nears
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Job creation lowest on record among under-30s
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NK troops disguised as 'indigenous' people in Far East for combat against Ukraine: report
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China delaying customs clearance of textbooks to set back classes at S. Korean schools
Chinese authorities have delayed the customs clearance of textbooks to be used at South Korean schools in China, pushing back the schools' classes for the new academic semester, sources with knowledge of the matter said Tuesday.South Korean residents expressed concerns that the postponement of the customs clearance is due to a row between Seoul and Beijing over the planned deployment of a ground-based, anti-ballistic missile system in South Korea by the US military. (Yonhap)China has opposed the
Feb. 21, 2017
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[Newsmaker] Trump names new national security adviser
US President Donald Trump named Army Lt. Gen. H.R. McMaster to be his new national security adviser Monday, a week after sacking Mike Flynn accused of having inappropriate contact with Russia's ambassador."Gen. H.R. McMaster will become the national security adviser. He's a man of tremendous talent and tremendous experience. I watched and read a lot over the last two days. He is highly respected by everyone in the military, and we're very honored to have him," Trump said at his Florida resort.Tr
Feb. 21, 2017
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Trump calls NK 'really really important' subject, pledges to take care of it
US President Donald Trump said Thursday he will take care of the problem of North Korea, calling the communist nation one of "really really important subjects."Trump made the remark during a news conference announcing his new pick for labor secretary, arguing that his administration "inherited a mess" at home and abroad, including North Korea, and complaining about leaks of sensitive government information to the press. US President Donald Trump (Yonhap)"As you know, our administration inherited
Feb. 17, 2017
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Australian foreign minister to visit S. Korea to discuss cooperation
Australia's top diplomat will visit South Korea later this week to discuss regional security issues and bilateral economic cooperation, its embassy said Thursday.Foreign Minister Julie Bishop will stay in the country for two days until Saturday, according to the Australian Embassy in Seoul.Julie Bishop (Yonhap)Bishop will visit the UN Memorial Cemetery in Busan to pay tribute to Australian veterans of the Korean War. She will also tour the Demilitarized Zone that divides the two Koreas.Her visit
Feb. 16, 2017
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Malaysian police detain another suspect in death of NK leader's brother: reports
Malaysian police on Thursday arrested another female suspect in connection with the latest killing of the half brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, a Malaysian news report said. Police detained a second woman who was allegedly involved in the death of Kim Jong-nam following the previous day's arrest of the first suspect, according to Bernama, Malaysia's national news agency. (Yonhap)Japan's Kyodo News said that the woman apprehended carried a South Korean passport.Kim Jong-nam -- the eld
Feb. 16, 2017
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Mattis urges NATO allies to meet burden-sharing obligations
US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis on Wednesday called emphatically for NATO members to meet their defense spending obligations, warning that the US could "moderate its commitment to this alliance" unless they do so."No longer can the American taxpayer carry a disproportionate share of the defense of western values. Americans cannot care more for your children's future security than you do," Mattis said in a speech to NATO defense ministers at the NATO headquarters in Brussels, according to text of
Feb. 16, 2017
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Korea to dispatch more police officers to Philippines
South Korea's police said Tuesday they will send more officers to the Philippines to cope with increasing crimes against Korean nationals in the Southeast Asian country.Deputy Commissioner General Kim Guy-chan visited Manila for talks with Philippine police chief Ronald Dela Rosa to discuss a recent murder case involving a South Korean businessman.This photo provided by the National Police Agency shows Deputy Commissioner General Kim Guy-chan (L) talking with Philippine police officers at the So
Feb. 14, 2017
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Japan's revised textbook guideline renews claim to Dokdo
Japan renewed its claim to South Korea's easternmost islets of Dokdo in a revised guideline for school textbooks unveiled on Tuesday. The textbook guideline, posted on Tokyo's e-government website for public view before the official announcement, will apply to elementary school textbooks from 2020 and to middle school books from 2021.Dokdo (Yonhap)Currently, Japan is teaching its elementary and middle school students in social studies textbooks that Dokdo, called Takeshima in Japan, is its terri
Feb. 14, 2017
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TPP withdrawal could weaken US status in Asia-Pacific: think tank
The United States' recent withdrawal from the Trans-Pacific Partnership free trade agreement is expected to weaken its economic and strategic status in the Asia-Pacific region, a state-run think tank in Seoul said Monday.Last month, US President Donald Trump issued an executive order to pull out from the TPP, which was signed by his predecessor Barack Obama after seven years of negotiations with 11 countries.It has yet to be ratified due to US withdrawal.(Yonhap)"President Trump's decision to wi
Feb. 13, 2017
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S. Korean tourists in Paris robbed amid suburb unrest
A group of South Korean tourists in Paris were robbed of their train tickets and one passport in what appeared to be a case linked to the recent unrest over alleged police brutality, officials said Sunday.Some 40 Korean tourists were on a bus to their hotel around 9 p.m. Saturday (local time) when three or four black men boarded the bus and fled with the tourists' Eurostar tickets and the passport of the group's Korean tour guide, according to officials at the South Korean Embassy in Paris.The m
Feb. 12, 2017
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Le Pen rallies supporters for French presidential launch
LYON (AFP) -- French far-right leader Marine Le Pen gave a major speech Sunday to formally launch her presidential bid with a programme featuring many of the themes that propelled Donald Trump to the White House.Le Pen, who leads the National Front, on Saturday published a list of 144 "commitments" built around putting France first, reclaiming sovereignty from the European Union, and clamping down on immigration.The 48-year-old is convinced that Trump and the Brexit vote in Britain point to the
Feb. 5, 2017
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Court denies Trump request to immediately restore travel ban
WASHINGTON (AP) _ A federal appeals court denied early Sunday the Justice Department's request for an immediate reinstatement of President Donald Trump's ban on accepting certain travelers and all refugees.The Trump administration appealed a temporary order restraining the ban nationwide, saying late Saturday night that the federal judge in Seattle overreached by "second-guessing'' the president on a matter of national security.Now the higher court's denial of an immediate stay means the legal b
Feb. 5, 2017
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Rights group says Philippine killings are extrajudicial
MANILA, Philippines (AP) -- Most of the thousands of killings of poor suspects under Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte's anti-drug crackdown appear to be extrajudicial executions and may constitute crimes against humanity, Amnesty International said Wednesday.The London-based human rights group urged Duterte's government to adopt an approach that respects human rights in its fight against drugs and crime, and called on the police and judiciary to prosecute officers involved in unlawful killin
Feb. 1, 2017
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Trump comments on Japan, China currencies rattle markets
TOKYO (AP) -- Japan is not deliberately weakening the yen to boost its exports, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe said Wednesday when asked in parliament about President Donald Trump's accusations of currency manipulation. Abe is expected to meet with Trump in Washington on Feb. 10. He said Japan would again explain to the US side its unprecedented monetary easing policies, which have pulled the yen lower against the dollar in recent years. "The criticism that our policies are intended to direct the yen
Feb. 1, 2017
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Israeli forces begin evacuation of West Bank outpost
AMONA, West Bank (AP) -- Israeli forces began an operation to evacuate settlers from a West Bank outpost on Wednesday whose slated destruction could rupture Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's narrow coalition, dominated by ultranationalists who support settlements.Unarmed police in blue sweatshirts and black baseball caps made their way up the hill around midday Wednesday. On the hilltop, youngsters erected makeshift barricades from smashed tiles, rusty metal bars and large rocks to slow their
Feb. 1, 2017
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Mexicans begin to unite in fight against Trump's plans
(AP)--Mexicans are beginning to debate how to fight back against US President Donald Trump's aggressive stance on trade and immigration.Prominent political figures have suggested the country expel US law enforcement agents, stop detaining Central American migrants or no longer inspect northbound trucks for drug shipments. Some activist groups on Friday were calling for a boycott of American brands. Former President Felipe Calderon said Thursday that "we have to design a policy of retaliation'' f
Jan. 28, 2017
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Trump's immigration curbs no surprise, those affected say
(AP) -- Many citizens of Muslim-majority countries affected by President Donald Trump's curbs on travel to the United States say they were hardly surprised the restrictions rank among his first orders of business.The new commander-in-chief had, after all, once called for a ``complete and total shutdown'' of Muslim arrivals, and in his inaugural speech vowed to eradicate ``radical Islamic terrorism'' from the face of the earth.But that doesn't make news of the clampdown sting any less for those o
Jan. 28, 2017
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Philippines vows no whitewash in South Korean’s murder
MANILA, (AFP) -- Philippine President Rodrigo Duterte’s office vowed on Sunday there would be no cover-up or whitewash in the investigation into a South Korean’s murder by police.The kidnapping and killing of the businessmen has fuelled fears about widespread abuse by officers as they prosecute Duterte’s deadly anti-drug war.The businessman disappeared from his home in Angeles City north of Manila last October.Police from a special anti-drug unit abducted him under the guise of a raid on illega
Jan. 22, 2017
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UK government accused of covering up failed nuclear missile test
LONDON (AFP) -- The British government was accused on Sunday of covering up a failed test of its nuclear weapons deterrent last year, just weeks before lawmakers voted to renew the system.Prime Minister Theresa May refused to say whether she knew about the reported malfunction of an unarmed missile when she urged MPs to support updating the Trident nuclear system.The Sunday Times newspaper, citing a senior naval source, claimed that the Trident II D5 missile failed after being launched from a
Jan. 22, 2017
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Women’s marches draw millions in resistance to Trump
More than two million people flooded the streets of Washington and other US cities and demonstrators around the world joined in as women opposed to Donald Trump led a peaceful, stunning rebuke against the new US president.As a sea of protesters brought downtown Washington to a standstill, streaming past the White House in pink “pussyhats,” Trump launched a withering attack on the media, accusing it of downplaying or even lying about the attendance at his swearing-in a day earlier.The new preside
Jan. 22, 2017