Most Popular
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Industry experts predicts tough choices as NewJeans' ultimatum nears
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Jung's paternity reveal exposes where Korea stands on extramarital babies
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Samsung entangled in legal risks amid calls for drastic reform
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Opposition chief acquitted of instigating perjury
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[Herald Interview] 'Trump will use tariffs as first line of defense for American manufacturing'
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Agency says Jung Woo-sung unsure on awards attendance after lovechild revelations
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[Exclusive] Hyundai Mobis eyes closer ties with BYD
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[Herald Review] 'Gangnam B-Side' combines social realism with masterful suspense, performance
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[Health and care] Getting cancer young: Why cancer isn’t just an older person’s battle
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Why S. Korean refiners are reluctant to import US oil despite Trump’s energy push
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[Editorial] No free lunch
A special committee of the National Assembly to reform pension systems held its first plenary meeting Tuesday. The ruling and opposition parties had agreed to create the ad hoc committee in July to discuss plans to replenish four fast decreasing public pensions -- the national, government employee, military and teachers’ pensions. The severity of pension problems is too well known. According to the Ministry of Health and Welfare’s fourth forecast of pension reserves, announced in 2
EditorialOct. 27, 2022
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[Gearoid Reidy] The West has failed — North Korea is a nuclear state
The world might not want to hear it, but Kim Jong-un might be right. “There will never be such a thing as our abandonment of the nuclear weapons or denuclearization,” Kim declared last month. “The position of our state as a nuclear nation has become irreversible.” Decades of pursuing the “denuclearization” of the Korean Peninsula has failed. After North Korea last month declared itself a nuclear weapons state, it’s time for the US and its allies to accep
ViewpointsOct. 26, 2022
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[Kim Seong-kon] Good intentions, bad outcomes
Due to cultural differences or a lack of foreign language proficiency, we are prone to misunderstanding others or making mistakes despite our good intentions. Such a tendency may result in awkward situations, and yet we should try to understand each other. Recently, for example, many Koreans were upset about the Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act, which grants benefits to electric cars assembled in the US only. The Korean people thought that it would be unfair to Hyundai Mot
ViewpointsOct. 26, 2022
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[Editorial] Credit crunch
The outlook was rosy in May when a local Legoland theme park opened in Chuncheon, Gangwon Province. Around 2 million visitors were expected to visit the new attraction each year, creating growth momentum and new jobs in the region. As the initial phase of excitement passed, the number of visitors, which hit a peak of 130,000 in May, began to drop to around 100,000 in June and then 70,000 in July. But Legoland’s flash-in-the-pan popularity is nothing compared with what has followed in conne
EditorialOct. 26, 2022
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[Martin Schram] A little inflation help from the other side
President Joe Biden and his designated message-deliverers just got some crucial, last-minute insights -- from a most unlikely source -- Wednesday night. It made clear how they should be talking about the only issue that almost half of Americans say they really care about in this all-over-the-lot midterm campaign. Yep, we are talking today about the issue you assumed Democratic strategist James Carville made unforgettable with his famous 1992 campaign warning: “It’s the economy, stu
ViewpointsOct. 25, 2022
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[Kim Sang-kyun] Reasons to stay away from illegal drugs
Last July, in the middle of Gangnam, a posh district in Seoul well known for the global hit K-pop song “Gangnam Style,” a man in his 20s, who took methamphetamine at a drinking party, died in a car accident on his way home. Police found 64 grams of methamphetamine in his vehicle. Recently, a smuggler carrying illegal drugs to South Korea in his stomach died after packets of drugs burst inside him. This was the first time a so-called “body-packer” had been found in South
ViewpointsOct. 25, 2022
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[Editorial] Far-fetched proposal
Lee Jae-myung, the leader of the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea, proposed last Friday that a special counsel should be appointed to investigate allegations that he gave preference to developers of Daejang-dong, a district in Seongnam, while he was the mayor. He made the proposal as prosecutors were looking into suspicions he received illegal funds for his presidential bid. The prosecution arrested Kim Yong, his close aide and deputy head of the Institute for Democracy, a think tank of
EditorialOct. 25, 2022
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[Andreas Kluth] Putin is making nuclear warfare new normal
Put aside, if you can, the growing anxiety about Russian President Vladimir Putin going nuclear in his barbaric war against Ukraine. Even if he doesn’t -- and the risk, though real, remains small -- he’s already brought the whole world closer to atomic disaster occurring at some point. That’s because Putin, with his repeated threats to drop nukes on Ukraine or other European countries, has in effect kicked off a new and global arms race in these diabolical weapons. He has pro
ViewpointsOct. 24, 2022
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[Gi-wook Shin, Seong-hyon Lee] What should the world expect from Xi?
The 104-minute speech by Chinese President Xi Jinping at the country’s 20th party congress reveals a leader who believes he is on a historic mission to save China’s self-described socialism in the 21st century. Xi’s Oct. 16 speech launched the twice-a-decade meeting, where the national Communist Party appoints its leadership and announces China’s policy direction for the coming years. The address reads very much like a sequel to his previous one five years ago. At that
ViewpointsOct. 24, 2022
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[Editorial] No more ‘bloodstained bread’
A wave of protests is raging over the death of a young worker at a bread-making factory run by an affiliate of South Korean bakery giant SPC Group, illustrating the public anger over the negligence and malpractice that were glaringly laid bare. The 23-year old employee was killed Oct. 15 after her upper body was caught in a sauce mixer at the factory of SPL in Pyeongtaek, Gyeonggi Province. SPL is owned by Paris Croissant, a firm wholly owned by SPC Group Chairman Heo Young-in and his family. He
EditorialOct. 24, 2022
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[Robert J. Fouser] The new park in Songhyeon-dong
After years of sitting behind a wall, the large empty space in Songhyeon-dong opened to the public on Oct. 7 this year. During the Japanese colonial period, the space was used for housing for employees of the Joseon Shiksan Bank. From liberation in 1945 to 1997, it was a housing compound for US diplomats. After the diplomats moved out, Samsung Life Insurance bought the land and then sold it to Korean Air, who planned to develop it into a luxury hotel. As opposition to those plans grew, the City
ViewpointsOct. 21, 2022
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[Editorial] Rice populism
The main opposition Democratic Party of Korea passed its revision bill to the Grain Management Act unilaterally through the Agriculture, Food, Rural Affairs, Oceans and Fisheries Committee of the National Assembly on Wednesday. The party has a majority of 11 seats in the 19-member committee. The bill makes it compulsory for the government to purchase overproduced rice if rice prices drop more than 5 percent from the average level or if production exceeds expectation by more than 3 percent. Under
EditorialOct. 21, 2022
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[Djoomart Otorbaev] Russian elite flood Central Asia
Bishkek’s residents have been confronted with an unusual sight these past few weeks. The streets of Kyrgyzstan’s capital are teeming with tens of thousands of educated men with European features -- Russian citizens fleeing President Vladimir Putin’s “partial mobilization” of 300,000 reservists to fight his war against Ukraine. The Kyrgyz people and government have welcomed them with open arms. Many other Eurasian cities such as Tbilisi (Georgia), Baku (Azerbaijan),
ViewpointsOct. 20, 2022
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[Kim Myong-sik] Leftist opposition needs to revise security framework
If, just if, the Yoon Suk-yeol administration of South Korea decides to go nuclear to counter the nuclear threat from North Korea, it will have to deal first with the leftist opposition inside the country before trying to win support from its allies. Actually, voices are growing in the intellectual community of South Korea, calling for the development of the nation’s own nuclear arms capability as Pyongyang rachets up its saber-rattling these past weeks with the test-firing of missiles of
ViewpointsOct. 20, 2022
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[Editorial] Dispute over regulations
The aftermath of the worst-ever server outage of Kakao Corp. over the weekend is still reverberating throughout the South Korean business and political sectors, with debates heating up over the scope of regulations for private firms. The fire, which broke out Saturday at the data center in Pangyo, south of Seoul, paralyzed a wide range of mobile services run by Kakao, including the country’s biggest mobile messenger KakaoTalk. The service outage, which lasted for more than 10 hours, caused
EditorialOct. 20, 2022
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[Martin Schram] Will Putin’s exit be an off-ramp or trapdoor?
Once again, the talking- and typing-heads are filling our news screens with double-doming about building an “off-ramp” Vladimir Putin will be willing to take to get out of the Ukraine war. But Putin still doesn’t seem to be looking for an off-ramp. He’s frantically watching out for a trapdoor. It may well be his most likely exit from the Ukraine war he now knows he can’t win. A now panicky Putin fears he might stumble or strut onto an unseen trapdoor that could in
ViewpointsOct. 19, 2022
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[Kim Seong-kon] K-pop: The power of cultural diplomacy
Travelling around the world these days, we can easily see Korean pop culture's diplomatic power. K-pop and K-film have not only let the world know about South Korea, but also significantly upgraded its international image. Recently, I found out that the most highly rated Netflix movies included two Korean films, “Handmaiden” and “Mother.” Then, I came across an intriguing article in The Guardian, entitled, “Squid Game, Blackpink, kimchi pancakes ... How did S
ViewpointsOct. 19, 2022
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[Editorial] Trace smuggled money
The prosecution raided the headquarters and several affiliates of Ssangbangwool Group on Monday. The group allegedly handed dollar bills worth tens or thousands of millions of won to each of about 60 employees and made them take flights to China in 2019 with the money. When a Korean takes foreign currency in excess of $10,000 out of the country, he or she must declare it to customs, but the Ssangbangwool employees did not. They are said to have concealed dollar bills inside books, cosmetic cases
EditorialOct. 19, 2022
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[Editorial] Perils of the wired nation
Kakao Corp., which runs the country’s biggest mobile messenger KakaoTalk, suffered its worst-ever server outage over the weekend, which paralyzed messaging and other mobile services, illustrating the immense danger that could hit a tightly interconnected society when things go wrong. KakaoTalk’s text, photo and video message services were disrupted after a fire broke out at the data center in Pangyo, just south of Seoul, at 3:30 p.m. Saturday. The blaze at the Pangyo data center, ope
EditorialOct. 18, 2022
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[Dan Reiter] Lessons of history about how to end Ukraine war
Every war must eventually end. But how will the last chapter of the Russia-Ukraine war read? With a bang, a white flag or a begrudging agreement? Moscow planned for rapid victory, imagining the indomitable Russian army sweeping aside collapsing Ukrainian resistance. But Ukrainian bravery, weapons from the North Atlantic Treaty Organization and Russian military incompetence prevented a swift win. Ukraine, in fact, is now taking back land that Russia had seized. History shows us how other flailing
ViewpointsOct. 18, 2022