Most Popular
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IMF lowers Korea's 2025 growth outlook to 2%
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Labor Ministry dismisses Hanni harassment case
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North Korean troops fighting alongside Russia, NIS confirms
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Reality show 'I Live Alone' disciplined for 'glorifying' alcohol consumption
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[Herald Interview] How Gopizza got big in India
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Yoon focuses on expanding global solidarity against NK-Russia military ties at APEC, G20 summits
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[KH Explains] Dissecting Hyundai Motor's lobbying in US
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Japan to hold 1st memorial for Korean forced labor victims at Sado mine
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[Kim Seong-kon] Farewell to the vanishing John Wayne era
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[Graphic News] 70% of S. Koreans believe couples can live together without tying the knot: survey
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Korea to expand project keeping wild boars from threatening residents
The Environment Ministry said Wednesday that it will expand a project to prevent wild boars inhabiting Mount Bukhan in Seoul and neighboring Gyeonggi Province from entering downtown areas, as the animals have increasingly posed challenges to residents there.The project, which started last year in cooperation with the regional governments of Seoul and Gyeonggi and the Korea National Park Service, calls for capturing wild boars and setting traps or other facilities on their major trails to make it
April 5, 2017
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Air pollution aggravates Parkinson's disease
Exposure to air pollution increases risk of aggravating Parkinson's disease and may cause neurological disease progression, a study showed Friday. According to the study by Kim Ho at Seoul National University, patients with the neurodegenerative disease are more likely to visit emergency rooms during days with high levels of air-pollutant particles.(Yonhap)Data for the study were drawn from 1 million cohort samples of South Koreans provided by the National Health Insurance Service between 2002 a
March 24, 2017
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Military begins environmental impact assessment on THAAD site
South Korea has begun an environmental impact assessment of a local golf course ahead of the deployment of an advanced US missile defense system there, the military said Thursday, speeding up the deployment amid growing threats from North Korea. The defense ministry picked a firm in December to conduct the assessment of the site in Seongju in the southeast, which will host the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense system. Late last month, the company began looking into the location to see if THAA
March 16, 2017
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Gov't to toughen monitoring of hepatitis C
The government will strengthen nationwide monitoring of hepatitis C as part of efforts to prevent a mass outbreak from recurring, officials said Monday.Hundreds of South Koreans were infected with the virus between 2015 and last year, which causes both acute and chronic infection.There is currently no vaccine, though about 15 to 45 percent of infected persons are known to spontaneously recover and clear out the virus within six months of infection without treatment.The Ministry of Welfare and He
March 13, 2017
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More than half of captive marine mammals in Korea killed: data
More than half of captive marine mammals raised since 1990 in Korean aquariums are killed, data showed Tuesday, prompting concerns about the sub-par conditions in their breeding facilities.Out of 98 lives sent to Korean aquariums since 1990, 52 died of diseases while caged, according to environmentalists.“The remaining 41 marine mammals should be released to their homes,” said a member of the Korean Federation for Environmental Movement in a press conference in Seoul, Tuesday. (Herald DB)The cas
March 7, 2017
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Endangered brown long-eared bat found in eastern Korea
An endangered species of bats has been found in caves in Gangwon Province, a study showed Tuesday. The recent study by Inje County in Gangwon Province indicated that three species of bats -- the brown long-eared bat, eastern long-fingered bat and greater horseshoe bat -- had been found in caves across the province. The brown long-eared bat is listed as an endangered species level II, whereas the other two are believed to be the most common bat species in the nation. A brown long-eared bat (Gaya
March 7, 2017
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Bird flu in Korea unlikely to infect humans: health authorities
South Korean health authorities said Tuesday that there is very low risk that the avian influenza virus strain in the country will infect humans.The H5N6 strain of AI is not very contagious when it comes to people, the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. South Korea has yet to report any human infection of the flu.The announcement comes as the country has struggled to contain the animal disease for nearly three months.(Yonhap)The KCDC said it intentionally infected a weasel wi
March 7, 2017
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Korea confirmed to have 47,000 indigenous species of animals, plants
South Korea is confirmed to have more than 47,000 indigenous species of animals and plants for the first time in 20 years, with more than 100,000 native species presumed to exist on the entire Korean Peninsula, a state-run think tank said Thursday.The National Institute of Biological Resources, affiliated with the Environment Ministry, put the number of the country's indigenous biological species at 47,003 as of December last year, which it has listed as part of a project to establish a comprehe
Feb. 9, 2017
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Half of Koreans say fine dust action plan ‘unsatisfactory’
Amid growing public anxiety over the Korean Peninsula’s gray skies and health risks linked to air pollution, more than half of South Koreans find themselves unsatisfied with the government’s countermeasures against fine dust, a survey showed Wednesday.According to the poll conducted by the state-run Korea Environment Institute, 53.1 percent of Koreans said the government’s fine dust countermeasures are unsatisfactory, while another 55.2 percent said they worry about the current fine dust level h
Feb. 1, 2017
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Porpoises biggest victims of incidental catches, poaching among whales
Seven out of 10 aquatic mammals accidentally caught in nets or poached in South Korea are finless porpoises, designated as a maritime mammal to be conserved by the government last year, with the number of such victims reaching some 1,300 on average annually, the coast guard here said Thursday.According to the Ulsan Maritime Security Police, a total of 9,710 whales were trapped in nets or illegally captured inside the South Korean waters between 2011-15. (Yonhap)Of the total, porpoises took for
Jan. 12, 2017
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Study blames windstorm for warmer Arctic
Excessive warmth in the Arctic was triggered by the entry of a strong Atlantic windstorm, a team of South Korean researchers has revealed. According to a study released Thursday by researchers of the Korea Polar Research Institute, the warm and moist air driven to the Arctic by a windstorm named “Frank” is the primary contributing factor of the extremely warm weather in the region. Storm Frank, the worst winter flooding on record in the United Kingdom, left hundreds homeless for two days in late
Jan. 5, 2017
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Korea to reduce greenhouse gases 37% by 2030
South Korea unveiled a set of measures on Tuesday to promote renewable energy usage and expand research and development in order to meet the long-term target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 37 percent.The plan, approved by the Cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Hwang Kyo-ahn, is aimed at changing the country's energy structure into a more environmentally friendly power supply system and preparing for the upcoming low-carbon era, according to the Ministry of Strategy and Finance.South Kore
Dec. 6, 2016
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Experts urge regional efforts to tackle fine dust with China in front
Experts stressed the importance of regional cooperation in eradicating air pollution Thursday, also calling for a binding pact that will require each and every country in Northeast Asia to do their utmost.In an international seminar hosted by the Federation of Korean Industries (FKI), experts from South Korea, Japan and China also highlighted a need to have China involved in such joint efforts, noting air pollution has no boundaries."South Korea's government and business community will do their
Nov. 24, 2016
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[Weekender] Best places for winter bird-watching
Migratory birds visit South Korea from around October as the air begins to grow cool, heralding the change in season. These winged guests come annually from Russia, China and Mongolia, flying without rest for 15 hours per day to spend a “warmer” winter on the peninsula and nurture new life.Their arrival here makes winter prime time for bird-watching, with several spots that are especially popular. These sites are usually near river basins and deltas, where rivers meet the sea. A flock of migrat
Nov. 18, 2016
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[Weekender] Arrival of winter guests
CHEORWON, Gangwon Province -- From October, hundreds of winged guests arrive at Cheorwon, a rural town near the northern border. On a long, arduous journey to southern wintering grounds, about 800 cranes make a stopover at Cheorwon for its some 10,500 hectares of rice fields, which provide abundant food and resting places for them. Kim Su-ho, a local vet for wild birds with over 20 years of experience, says he is able to tell the difference between cranes that have been there before and those vi
Nov. 18, 2016
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Use of disposable cups surges to record volume
Use of disposable cups in South Korea surged to a record-high volume last year mainly due to heavy coffee drinking, government data showed Sunday.The Ministry of Environment said more than 672.4 million disposable cups were used in South Korea last year, up 7.7 percent from the 2014 tally of 624.32 million. The actual amount of single-use cups used here can be much greater than the government tally because the ministry's data was based only on sales from 12 large coffee chains and five fast food
Oct. 16, 2016
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Farmer hit by water cannon in protest dies
A farmer who was hit by a police water cannon during a protest last fall died Sunday.Baek Nam-gi, 69, had been in coma since the water cannon knocked him down during the demonstration on Nov. 14 last year.Seoul National University Hospital pronounced Baek dead of acute renal failure at 2:15 p.m. Baek's family members and civic activists were by his side.Critics have argued Baek was fatally injured because of police's excessive crackdown on the protest.Supporters of the late farmer held a press c
Sept. 25, 2016
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Greenpeace files suit against building new nuclear reactors in Korea
The Seoul bureau of environmental group Greenpeace said Monday it has filed a suit against the South Korean nuclear security watchdog to nullify a plan to build two more nuclear reactors in the country's southeastern city of Ulsan.In June, the Nuclear Safety and Security Commission allowed the state-run Korea Hydro and Nuclear Power Co. to construct Shin Kori No. 5 and No. 6 in the industrial city.The international group said it filed the case with the Seoul Administrative Court on Monday along
Sept. 12, 2016
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Seoul to resume policing operations to protect Han River waters
South Korea will resume its policing operations next month to prevent Chinese fishermen from illegally entering neutral waters of the Han River estuary ahead of the peak season for crab fishing, Seoul's Joint Chiefs of Staff said Wednesday. In June, the joint military police unit composed of the Marine Corps personnel and police forces under the approval of the UNC Military armistice commission successfully completed its first round of operations near the Han River to expel Chinese fishermen, th
Aug. 31, 2016
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Korea's finance minister meets with GCF head
South Korea's finance minister on Thursday held a meeting with the head of the Green Climate Fund to discuss ways to enhance the country's contribution to the development of the organization, the finance ministry here said."The South Korean government is concerned about the development of the GCF, which is headquartered in our country," Finance Minister Yoo Il-ho was quoted as saying in a meeting with Hela Cheikhrouhou, the executive director of the GCF, in Seoul.South Korea`s Finance Minister Y
Aug. 11, 2016