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Jun Ji-hye

Korea Times Finance Reporter

Hello, I am Jun Ji-hye, a reporter at The Korea Times. I primarily cover financial authorities and write articles on a wide range of topics related to finance and capital markets. If you have any information to share, feel free to email me at jjh@koreatimes.co.kr, and I will review it carefully. I am committed to always doing my best to communicate with readers through high-quality articles.

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Law & Crime

Court rejects state compensation for boy's death after vaccinations

gettyimagesbankBy Jun Ji-hyeA court has ruled against a mother who filed a compensation suit against the state claiming her son had died after being vaccinated against typhoid fever and other diseases upon the request of a school the son entered. According to legal sources, Monday, the Seoul Administrative Court handed down the ruling, Dec. 8, saying the son was not eligible for state compensation as he was not the subject of the country's compulsory vaccination program.In 2019, the boy entered an international school operating as a boarding school. The school asked students including the boy to be vaccinated against typhoid fever, hepatitis A and hepatitis B before moving into the boarding quarters in order to prevent the possible transmission of infectious diseases on the premises.Following the guidelines, the boy was vaccinated in January of the same year.Six months later, he died in his home. The autopsy report by the National Forensic Service said he died of an unknown cause. In November 2021, his mother asked the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA) to pay compens

Feb 20, 2023By Jun Ji-hye
Court rejects state compensation for boy's death after vaccinations
Law & Crime

Ex-teacher gets jail term for putting detergent in kindergarteners' meals

gettyimagesbankBy Jun Ji-hyeA former kindergarten teacher has received a four-year jail term for putting detergent and mosquito repellent into the meals of kindergarten students.The Seoul Southern District Court convicted the 50-year-old on charges of attempted injury to children, Thursday, and arrested her in the court. The court also ordered 10 years of employment restrictions at related children's institutions.“She committed the crime against children but she was obliged to protect them. She also continued making excuses that were not understandable,” the court said in its ruling. “The fact that the children were not actually harmed was considered when the sentence was decided.”According to investigators, the woman put detergent and mosquito repellent in meals prepared for children at a kindergarten in Seoul in November 2020. During the police investigation, she claimed the fluid she put in the food was just water. But following analysis by the National Forensic Service it was proven to contain detergent and mosquito repellent.In her first trial, she reject

Feb 17, 2023By Jun Ji-hye
Ex-teacher gets jail term for putting detergent in kindergarteners' meals
Health

Will indoor mask mandate be fully lifted earlier than expected?

Prime Minister Han Duck-soo speaks during a government meeting on the COVID-19 response at the Government Complex in Seoul, Friday. YonhapBy Jun Ji-hyeAuthorities are cautiously raising the possibility of fully lifting the mandatory indoor mask-wearing rules earlier than expected, as COVID-19 numbers have continued decreasing in recent weeks. Prime Minister Han Duck-soo said on Friday that the daily average number of COVID-19 confirmed cases has decreased for eight consecutive weeks, remaining at about the 10,000 mark. At the same time, the number of critically ill patients has also been consistently reducing.“Situations related to the COVID-19 pandemic have clearly stabilized,” Han said during a government meeting on the COVID-19 response, held at the Government Complex in Seoul. “If the downward trend continues in and outside of the country, we will be able to begin discussions regarding fully lifting the indoor mask mandate soon, along with downgrading the disease category of the virus.”In May last year, Korea lifted the outdoor mask mandate in a major step

Feb 17, 2023By Jun Ji-hye
Will indoor mask mandate be fully lifted earlier than expected?
Society

Seoul city to offer weekend-childcare services for working parents

gettyimagesbankBy Jun Ji-hyeTen weekend-childcare facilities will open in Seoul for parents who have to work Saturdays and Sundays, as part of the comprehensive childcare assistance project pushed by Seoul Mayor Oh Se-hoon.According to the Seoul Metropolitan Government (SMG), Thursday, the facilities will begin operation in June at the earliest.The city government will also build four additional centers that are available 24 hours a day, 365 days a year for infants and toddlers increasing the number of such facilities in the city to 15 by the end of the year. The city government is planning to build at least one weekend-childcare facility or one 365-day center in every 25 districts of the country's capital.The city government will invest about 1.9 trillion won ($1.5 billion) this year for these two plans and seven others aimed at offering better childcare services for parents residing in the city. “There has been growing demand for childcare services offered during weekends,” a city government official said. The city government is also planning to increase the ratio of pu

Feb 16, 2023By Jun Ji-hye
Seoul city to offer weekend-childcare services for working parents
Society

Women's priority parking spaces to disappear in Seoul

Women's priority parking spaces at a building in Jongno-gu, central Seoul / Korea Times fileBy Jun Ji-hyeWomen's priority parking spaces at public buildings and other large-scale facilities such as department stores in Seoul will disappear, beginning this year, 14 years after the policy was first introduced.According to the Seoul Metropolitan Government, Wednesday, such parking spaces will be changed to family parking spots, so that a more diverse group of people can enjoy the benefits regardless of gender.Women's priority parking spaces, marked with pink paint stick figures wearing skirts, were introduced in Seoul in 2009 as part of measures to protect women amid a series of violent crimes committed against women, especially in underground parking lots at the time. The policy called for a move to allocate more than 10 percent of parking spaces as priority parking spaces for women, in car lots that can accommodate more than 30 cars. These female-friendly car parking spaces tend to be closer to the entrances of buildings and are often located next to handicapped spots so as to increas

Feb 15, 2023By Jun Ji-hye
Women's priority parking spaces to disappear in Seoul
Politics

Controversy grows over archery event using photos of president, first lady

People are encouraged to shoot toy arrows at photos of President Yoon Suk Yeol, first lady Kim Keon Hee and Justice Minister Han Dong-hoon during a liberal civic group's rally held in Seoul, Saturday. YonhapBy Jun Ji-hyeControversy is growing over an event arranged by a left-wing civic group, which allowed participants to shoot toy arrows at photos of President Yoon Suk Yeol, first lady Kim Keon Hee and Justice Minister Han Dong-hoon. Critics said the event encouraged excessive hatred that is already prevalent in Korean society, noting that it should be taken seriously as even children were welcomed to participate. The event was part of a rally held Saturday in central Seoul by a civic group calling for the resignation of the Yoon government and for a special counsel probe into stock manipulation allegations involving the first lady. Han, who was a senior prosecutor, is a close aide of Yoon. “The prosecutor-turned-president has abused the prosecution's power all over the country, threatening the country's democracy,” said Rep. Lee Su-jin of the main opposition Democratic

Feb 14, 2023By Jun Ji-hye
Controversy grows over archery event using photos of president, first lady
Law & Crime

'40 children die every year because of abuse'

gettyimagesbankGov't faces calls to take preemptive action to protect childrenBy Jun Ji-hyeAbout 40 children die every year in Korea due to child abuse committed mostly by their parents.According to statistics from the Ministry of Health and Welfare, Monday, the number of children who died from child abuse stood at 38 in 2017, 28 in 2018, 42 in 2019, 43 in 2020 and 40 in 2021, with its average tallied at about 38. By age group, most victims were under the age of three, accounting for 65 percent. Most deaths were attributed to parents, with the ratio standing at 68.5 percent of the total, followed by 9.3 percent committed by other relatives.The latest statistics came amid a public outcry over a recent abuse case allegedly committed by a stepmother and a biological father resulting in the death of their 12-year-old son. The boy died at a hospital on Feb. 7 after being found unconscious with what appeared to be bruises all over his body at his home in Incheon. The couple were arrested, on Feb. 10, with the stepmother charged with child abuse homicide and the father with habitual child a

Feb 13, 2023By Jun Ji-hye
'40 children die every year because of abuse'
Environment & Animals

US borough blocks Korean students' trip over country's dog meat tradition

Dogs kept in cages at a dog farm in Gyeonggi Province. Korea Times fileBy Jun Ji-hyeA proposed program for high school students of Ganghwa County, Incheon, that would send them to the U.S. borough of Palisades Park, New Jersey, for foreign language and culture education, has failed to get off the ground due to negative public opinion there regarding Korea's tradition of eating dog meat, which was raised by animal rights activists in the U.S., according to county officials, Friday.The county planned to send 12 high school students to the U.S. borough with which it has maintained friendly relations since 2020 to engage in the program. The program aimed to give Korean students opportunities to learn English and experience a different culture for three weeks. It was originally scheduled to take place in December. However, last June, Palisades Park abruptly informed Ganghwa County of their intention to suspend cooperation regarding the program, stating that the decision was unavoidable as it faced negative public opinion due to Korea's dog farms, where dogs are raised for meat, in Ganghwa

Feb 10, 2023By Jun Ji-hye
US borough blocks Korean students' trip over country's dog meat tradition
Politics

Rival parties trade attacks over first lady's stock manipulation allegations

President Yoon Suk Yeol, right, and first lady Kim Keon Hee wave goodbye at Zurich Airport before boarding a flight back to Korea after a four-day visit to Switzerland, Jan. 20. YonhapBy Jun Ji-hyeThe main opposition Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) vowed to push for a special counsel probe into stock manipulation allegations involving first lady Kim Keon Hee, while the ruling People Power Party (PPP) urged the DPK to stop attacking the 'innocent' first lady.The rival parties' battle over the issue intensified Friday following a court ruling on a related case.The Seoul Central District Court sentenced Kwon Oh-soo, the former head of Deutsch Motors, a BMW car dealer in Korea, to two years in prison, suspended for three years, for violating the Capital Markets Act, convicting him of manipulating the company's stock price. The opposition party has accused the first lady of direct or indirect involvement in the stock manipulation case for about three years since December 2009, citing suspicions that Kim's bank account was one of the 157 accounts used in the stock manipulation attempts.But

Feb 10, 2023By Jun Ji-hye
Rival parties trade attacks over first lady's stock manipulation allegations
Health

Gov't recommendation of COVID-19 vaccinations for babies unwelcomed by parents

gettyimagebankBy Jun Ji-hyeKim Won-kyeong, the mother of a 13-month-old girl and a four-year-old boy, felt confused when she got a text message from the Korea Disease Control and Prevention Agency (KDCA), Wednesday, which stated that the government will provide COVID-19 vaccinations for infants and toddlers from six months to four years beginning Feb. 13.In the message sent to all parents who have children in that age group across the country, the KDCA said that inoculation would be necessary to prevent infections and that it would be the best means to prevent virus patients from falling into a serious condition.Kim said the message caused her great concern. She could not be 100 percent sure about the safety of vaccines for young children.“The vaccines have been developed only recently, so I cannot trust their safety. Plus, I have already seen some people around me suffer from side effects after vaccinations,” Kim said in an interview. “I do not want my children to be vaccinated yet.”Park Sae-bom, the mother of a 13-month-old boy, also said possible side effec

Feb 9, 2023By Jun Ji-hye
Gov't recommendation of COVID-19 vaccinations for babies unwelcomed by parents
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