Most Popular
-
1
Seoul to host winter festival from Dec. 13
-
2
Blackpink's solo journeys: Complementary paths, not competition
-
3
N. Korea, Russia court softer image: From animal diplomacy to tourism
-
4
Smugglers caught disguising 230 tons of Chinese black beans as diesel exhaust fluid
-
5
Russia sent 'anti-air' missiles to Pyongyang, Yoon's aide says
-
6
[Today’s K-pop] Blackpink’s Jennie, Lisa invited to Coachella as solo acts
-
7
Defense ministry denies special treatment for BTS’ V amid phone use allegations
-
8
Dongduk Women’s University halts coeducation talks
-
9
OpenAI in talks with Samsung to power AI features, report says
-
10
Two jailed for forcing disabled teens into prostitution
-
[Antara Haldar] Wanted: Vladimir Putin
The internet has recently been flooded with AI-generated images of Russian President Vladimir Putin being put on trial or incarcerated. But while the images are fake, international criminal justice is becoming a reality. On March 17, after years of being mired in controversy and crisis, the International Criminal Court surprised the world by formally indicting Putin and issuing a warrant for his arrest. The ICC’s specific charge -- that Putin is responsible for the unlawful abduction and d
ViewpointsApril 3, 2023
-
[Song Young-gil] Low birthrate signals warning about ‘hopeless society’
South Korea has already entered into a "demographic onus" era under which the productive age population (15-64 years old) is less than the non-productive population (over 65 years old) due to the continually declining birthrate. The total fertility rate of South Korea dropped to 0.78 in 2022, the lowest in the world, indicating the significance of a childbirth problem in Korea. The figure is significantly lower than the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development average (1.5
ViewpointsApril 3, 2023
-
[Editorial] Spotlight NK rights abuses
The government made public its report on North Korea’s human rights violations on Thursday. It is the first time that the government has made public its annual report on the North’s dismal human rights record since it began drafting a report under the North Korean Human Rights Act. The Unification Ministry is said to have prepared a report on North Korea’s human rights violations annually from 2017, a year after the act was passed and when the Moon Jae-in administration began.
EditorialApril 3, 2023
-
[Elizabeth Shackelford] Consensus in foreign policy can be dangerous
With the 20th anniversary of the launch of the Iraq War, I’m reminded of the remarkable consensus behind that decision, which passed with strong bipartisan support. Experts, journalists and well-known media personalities joined the bandwagon too. Often, consensus is good. It clears away opposition and helps make things happen. But too often, quick agreement on hard problems is a sign of dangerous groupthink instead. This wide support has not aged well. It launched a bloody war, at a cost o
ViewpointsMarch 31, 2023
-
[Editorial] ‘Bold measures' needed
There is no question that South Korea has to address its low birthrate, a chronic problem that can deepen problems affecting a wide range of fields such as the economy, welfare, defense and national competitiveness in the coming years. Strangely enough, the country’s low fertility rate did not get full attention from the presidents of the past two administrations. In this context, it is an encouraging sign that President Yoon Suk Yeol presided over a meeting of the Presidential Committee o
EditorialMarch 31, 2023
-
[Lee In-hyun] ‘Naatu Naatu’ proves universal power of music
Los Angeles, the heart of the movie and entertainment industries, held two big festivals recently: the Golden Globes and the Oscars. In my opinion, the Oscars is more valuable and popular than the Golden Globes. Although not many people sit and watch the Oscars on TV, I personally enjoy watching it every year. While many tend to focus on who won the best movie, the best actor, or the best actress award, I am most interested in who won the best music award. Three years ago, the Oscars gave four p
ViewpointsMarch 30, 2023
-
[Editorial] Wet blanket on relations
Textbooks that Japan’s elementary school students will use from next year contain distorted information about Korean and Japanese history. The government-approved textbooks apparently water down the coercive nature of Japan’s wartime wrongdoings and strengthen its sovereignty claim to South Korea's Dokdo islets, among other things. Historical distortions in textbooks has been getting worse, with Japan increasing ambiguous expressions and unfounded arguments to avoid admitting re
EditorialMarch 30, 2023
-
[Lee Kyong-hee] A long way to rekindle Kim-Obuchi spirit
“Thousands of kilometers from their homeland, there were Koreans on the South Pacific islands. They were civilian laborers who built bases for Japanese forces and at times were driven into battle as cannon fodder.” The narration opens “Koreans in the Pacific War,” a KBS documentary based on declassified material from the US National Archives and Records Administration. The 40-minute film, produced in 2021, mostly consists of United News film footage. It traces US Marines
ViewpointsMarch 30, 2023
-
[Editorial] Mounting debt problems
The banking crisis, sparked by a loss of confidence by depositors and investors, toppled several banks in the US and Switzerland. It is now spreading into the eurozone. Given the tightly interlinked nature of financial systems across the globe, it is too naive to expect that South Korea would be left unscathed. The failures of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank in the past few weeks sparked turmoil in the global banking sector. After the collapse of Credit Suisse, which was taken over by UBS
EditorialMarch 29, 2023
-
[Kim Seong-kon] Living with ChatGPT and GPT-4
These days, artificial intelligence programs such as ChatGPT and GPT-4 are the talk of the town around the world. According to the press, approximately 100 million people are now conversing with ChatGPT every day. ChatGPT is convenient enough that people use it whenever necessary, heavily depending on it for many functions. ChatGPT can give us not only necessary information and knowledge, but also valuable advice and guidance. Thanks to the manifold conveniences of ChatGPT, there are now fewer r
ViewpointsMarch 29, 2023
-
[Contribution] Kazakhstan on way to important milestone
The start of this year could not have been any more different for Kazakhstan when compared to the tragic events of January 2022. Just over 12 months ago, our country was amid a violent coup attempt orchestrated by groups that wanted to see our nation collapse. There was a real possibility that Kazakhstan’s statehood would fall apart from within, which would have had reverberating consequences well beyond Central Asia. Fortunately, our country managed to not only recover from the wounds of
Diplomatic CircuitMarch 28, 2023
-
[Editorial] No compromise
The legislature should be a space where its members mediate and resolve social conflicts. But their negotiations over contentious issues are hard to watch, as only antagonism and confrontation seem to exist between the rival parties. The main opposition Democratic Party of Korea, which holds an overwhelming majority of 169 seats in the 300-member National Assembly, is wielding its legislative power as it pleases. The Assembly's passage of a revision to the Grain Management Act last Thursday
EditorialMarch 28, 2023
-
[Andrew Sheng] The global game of ChessGo
The geopolitical scenarios are so scary that we need new narratives to try and understand where it will all end -- nuclear annihilation or climate burning? Games are imitations of real life. They teach players how to think how the other would act, with better players learning to appreciate how the other player reads them. As all games are defined by rules, two-player games are actually far simpler than multi-player games. That is exactly where the global game has shifted, from a unipolar singl
ViewpointsMarch 28, 2023
-
[VIEWPOINT] The constitution of Uzbekistan enshrines norms of environmental law
Today our life is undergoing profound qualitative changes. Cardinal reforms are rapidly forming a completely new image of our society. The new edition of our constitution contains special norms on ensuring environmental rights of citizens, in particular, everyone has the right to a comfortable environment, reliable information about its condition, the state takes measures on improvement, restoration and protection of the environment, maintaining the ecological balance, protection of the e
Diplomatic CircuitMarch 27, 2023
-
[Editorial] Two sides of the same coin
Two contrasting stories concerning cryptocurrency are currently in the news. First, bitcoin pulled off a strong rally this month, renewing investor appetite for the world’s largest cryptocurrency. Second, Do Kwon, the co-founder of Terraform Labs -- once a high-flying darling of the crypto market before crashing spectacularly -- was arrested in Montenegro on March 23. Few people can deny the fact that cryptocurrencies tend to be more volatile than other traditional investment tools. The cr
EditorialMarch 27, 2023
-
[Howard Davies] US financial regulatory system is still broken
When a bank fails, attention inevitably turns to its regulators. Who was asleep at the wheel? Who failed to spot the warning signs? The failure of Silicon Valley Bank is no exception. In the United States, these questions are often directed at many different agencies, since the system is complex and hard for outsiders to understand. So, the conclusion is often an inverted form of John F. Kennedy’s famous observation after the Bay of Pigs fiasco, to the effect that “success has many
ViewpointsMarch 27, 2023
-
[Martin Schram] Xi, Putin ‘no limits’ pact has limits
Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin ended their Moscow summit last week by showcasing economic help and diplomatic support China will provide the now supplicant banana-less republic that is Putin’s Russia today. But even more importantly, the two autocratic presidents were careful not to spotlight this year’s most important reality: Apparently, their famous “no limits” partnership they boldly declared in 2022, just three weeks before Putin invaded Ukraine, has limits, after all
ViewpointsMarch 27, 2023
-
[Editorial] Young people resting
Last month, nearly 500,000 young people aged 15 to 29 gave up looking for a job. According to Statistics Korea, the population of young people choosing to be unemployed without looking for jobs increased to 497,000 in February, the largest number since related statistics were first compiled in January 2003. To make matters worse, youth employment shrank for four months in a row and the recent shrinkage was the biggest since February 2021. The overall employment situation was not positive, either
EditorialMarch 24, 2023
-
[Robert J. Fouser] The new robotics superpower
In Dobong-gu in northeast Seoul, the Seoul Robot & AI Museum (Seoul: RAIM), which was built mostly by robots and drones, is nearing completion. Scheduled to open this fall, the museum represents a daring effort to integrate robotics into the construction of a public building. Experiments in robotics development and implementation are active in South Korea and hold the potential to turn the country into the undisputed leader in robotics. In 2021, South Korea ranked first in the world in robot de
ViewpointsMarch 24, 2023
-
[Wang Son-taek] Japan must take sincere measures
President Yoon Suk Yeol completed a surprise visit to Tokyo last week. The two leaders of South Korea and Japan agreed to finish the 12-year-old confrontation and open a cooperative relationship toward the future. As a result, GSOMIA, or the Military Information Protection Agreement, was normalized. Japan will lift export restrictions on Korea, while Korea will drop its WTO complaint over Japan's unfair trade practices. Japan welcomed the Korean government's proposal for a significant
ViewpointsMarch 23, 2023