my timesThe Korea Times
lkm

Lee Kyung-min

Korea Times AI content 2 team Reporter

Value context and insight. lkm@koreatimes.co.kr

Go to EmailGo to URL

Read more

South Korea

Early-response gaps leave migrant women in Korea vulnerable to abuse: report

Violence against migrant women in Korea often begins long before victims come into contact with government support services, according to a report released Tuesday that pointed to persistent gaps in early intervention and access to protection. The Korea Institute for Healthy Family said it reviewed 16,300 counseling cases involving violence against migrant women from a total of 236,728 consultations handled by the Danuri Call Center in 2025. In 77.1 percent of those cases, the reported abuse involved domestic violence, making it by far the most common category. The findings suggest that violence frequently unfolds within intimate or family relationships and reaches public authorities only later, through police involvement, counseling services or outside referrals. The Danuri Call Center, which operates around the clock, provides counseling, interpretation and translation in 13 languages for migrants and multicultural families. It also offers crisis assistance, support during investigations and court proceedings, referrals to shelters and follow-up care. Demand for such services continued

Apr 28, 2026By Lee Kyung-min
Early-response gaps leave migrant women in Korea vulnerable to abuse: report
South Korea

Arts Council Korea names new chairman

The Arts Council Korea has named Lee Beom-heon, a special professor at Shinhan University, as its new chairman. The council, a state-run body tasked with leading the national arts agenda, said Lee was elected as its ninth chairman through an internal vote during a meeting on Monday. The Ministry of Culture, Sports and Tourism also appointed eight new board members during the meeting. Lee and the new board members will serve a three-year term. The meeting was attended by all 11 board members, including three continuing members whose terms run through July 31, 2027. Lee majored in East Asian painting at Hongik University and received a master’s degree from the same institution. He previously served as the 24th chairman of the Korea Fine Arts Association from 2017 to 2020, a cultural arts adviser to the Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education from 2019 to 2024 and the 28th chairman of the Federation of Korean Artistic and Cultural Organizations from 2020 to 2024. He currently serves as a special professor at Shinhan University, a non-tenure-track position typically reserved for prominent f

Apr 28, 2026By Lee Kyung-min
Arts Council Korea names new chairman
South Korea

Busan job fair targets global talent with expanded reach

Busan will open its doors to hundreds of international students seeking careers in Korea as city officials introduce an expanded job fair aimed at connecting foreign talent with regional employers. The Busan Metropolitan City government said Tuesday that the “2026 Busan Dream Job Fair” will take place Thursday from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. at BEXCO’s second exhibition hall. About 1,000 international students from the Busan, Ulsan and the South Gyeongsang region are expected to attend, alongside representatives from 44 companies. The city said the event, now in its fourth year, has widened its scope to include students from Ulsan and South Gyeongsang, positioning itself as a broader employment platform aimed at helping foreign students transition from education to long-term residency. Participating companies span key regional industries, including manufacturing, hospitality and tourism, services, logistics and trade, and medical institutions. The number of participating firms rose to 44 this year from 35 last year, an increase of about 25 percent, underscoring growing demand among local b

Apr 28, 2026By Lee Kyung-min
Busan job fair targets global talent with expanded reach
South Korea

Korea launches campaign urging fair treatment of immigrant workers

A new government-backed campaign seeks to change how workers are addressed on factory floors and at industrial worksites in Korea, urging employers to move away from dismissive or overly casual labels for immigrant laborers and instead use their given names. The Ministry of Employment and Labor said Monday that it launched the Immigrant Worker Labor Respect Campaign at an industrial site in Ulsan, a major port city in the southeast. The event, which drew approximately 100 foreign workers and representatives from labor rights foundations, centered on a highly symbolic gesture: the distribution of safety helmets engraved with each worker's individual name. Officials said the initiative is a direct challenge to a long-standing workplace culture where foreign staff are frequently addressed by generic titles, numbers or informal honorifics that critics argue strip them of their professional dignity. The campaign is rooted in the belief that linguistic respect is a prerequisite for physical safety. By emphasizing the use of names and formal honorifics, authorities hope to foster an environme

Apr 27, 2026By Lee Kyung-min
Korea launches campaign urging fair treatment of immigrant workers
South Korea

Korea exports K-edu model to reshape Sri Lanka’s medical research

Korea’s push to export its higher education model is gaining ground overseas, with a university-led partnership helping reshape Sri Lanka’s medical research and training landscape. The Ministry of Education said Monday that a recent evaluation of its “Leading University for International Cooperation” program found tangible progress in strengthening higher education and public health systems in Sri Lanka. At the center of the effort is Sungkyunkwan University, which has worked since 2020 with the University of Sri Jayewardenepura to establish the country’s first Department of Immunology and Molecular Medicine. The department, launched in July 2020, played a critical role during the COVID-19 pandemic as the only institution in Sri Lanka dedicated to nationwide infectious disease analysis, officials said. Building on that foundation, the Sri Lankan government supported the creation of a national-level Allergy and Immunology Research Institute within the university, set to be completed in January 2027. The institute is expected to serve as a central hub for infectious disease respo

Apr 27, 2026By Lee Kyung-min
Korea exports K-edu model to reshape Sri Lanka’s medical research
South Korea

Seoul reimagines derelict oil depot as year-round cultural hub

A former oil depot on the western edge of Seoul is fast becoming one of the city’s most ambitious cultural experiments, as officials push to turn the industrial relic into a year-round arts and events hub drawing 1 million visitors annually. Seoul Metropolitan Government said Monday it plans to expand programming at Oil Tank Culture Park, a repurposed oil reserve facility built in 1976 and closed in 2000, into a multidisciplinary cultural complex blending exhibitions, performances, festivals and wellness events. Built from massive steel storage tanks once used for fuel reserves, the site was reimagined as a public cultural space in 2017 that preserves its industrial structure while hosting immersive media art, concerts and participatory programs. The city said it is aiming to attract 1 million annual visitors for this year as it scales up about 20 major events per year, ranging from music festivals to sports and wellness programming. This month alone, Oil Tank Culture Park has hosted a series of large-scale events focused on inclusion and environmental themes. An inclusive arts festiva

Apr 27, 2026By Lee Kyung-min
Seoul reimagines derelict oil depot as year-round cultural hub
South Korea

Seoul turns streets into stages with expanded busking program

Korea’s capital is transforming sidewalks, plazas and riverside parks into open-air stages, rolling out an expanded street performance initiative that will bring nearly 2,000 performances across the city through the end of the year. Seoul Metropolitan Government said Monday it has launched the 2026 edition of Guseokguseok Live, a city-run cultural program that places curated live performances in everyday public spaces. Running from April through December, the program will feature 150 selected performance teams chosen through a competitive process that included video screening and live auditions. Officials said 657 teams applied this year, reflecting growing demand among street performers. The final lineup spans music, instrumental performances, traditional arts and stage performances. The city said the selection process was designed to emphasize live performance quality and audience engagement in public settings. Since its launch in 2011, Guseokguseok Live has grown into one of Seoul’s largest public arts initiatives, producing more than 27,000 performances by over 2,000 artist teams

Apr 27, 2026By Lee Kyung-min
Seoul turns streets into stages with expanded busking program
South Korea

Montana joins growing list of US states waiving driving tests for Koreans

Drivers from Korea living in the U.S. state of Montana will soon be able to exchange their Korean licenses for local ones without undergoing written or road tests under a new reciprocal agreement aimed at easing bureaucratic burdens. The National Police Agency announced Monday that it had finalized the agreement with Montana officials Thursday, making it the 30th U.S. jurisdiction to waive testing requirements for Korean citizens. Under the terms of the deal, which takes effect May 1, Koreans residing in Montana for more than 90 days can obtain a Montana Class D license — the standard for passenger vehicles — by simply passing a physical vision and aptitude screening. The agreement covers a broad range of Korean license types, including Class 1 large, special and standard licenses, as well as Class 2 standard licenses. The arrangement is reciprocal, allowing Montana residents legally staying in Korea to exchange their Class D licenses for a Korean Class 2 license under a similarly streamlined process. The addition of Montana marks the culmination of a decade of diplomatic efforts. Si

Apr 27, 2026By Lee Kyung-min
Montana joins growing list of US states waiving driving tests for Koreans
South Korea

Korea Heritage Service enlists G-Dragon-backed foundation for UNESCO cultural push

Korea’s cultural authorities are turning to the philanthropic arm of the country’s pop-music machine to bolster its diplomatic standing, enlisting a foundation backed by K-pop star G-Dragon to help navigate a high-stakes gathering of world heritage leaders. The Korea Heritage Service said Monday that it had entered into a formal partnership with the Just Peace Foundation, an organization established last year with the support of the musician, whose legal name is Kwon Ji-yong. The memorandum of understanding, signed Thursday at the National Palace Museum of Korea, aims to coordinate the hosting of the 48th session of the UNESCO World Heritage Committee. The partnership represents a calculated attempt by Seoul to bridge the gap between its traditional statecraft and its modern soft power exports. Under the agreement, the foundation and its affiliates will participate in the summit and spearhead public-awareness campaigns for the UNESCO World Heritage Fund, an international purse used to protect and restore sites of "outstanding universal value." The Just Peace Foundation was launched

Apr 27, 2026By Lee Kyung-min
Korea Heritage Service enlists G-Dragon-backed foundation for UNESCO cultural push
Business

SK Telecom extends 29-year run atop customer satisfaction index

SK Telecom, Korea’s largest wireless carrier, secured the top position in the mobile phone service category of the 2026 National Customer Satisfaction Index, extending an industry-leading streak that now spans nearly three decades. The achievement, announced Monday, marks the 29th consecutive year the company has led the rankings. SK Telecom remains the only enterprise across all domestic industries to have held the top position every year since the index was introduced in 1998. The survey, conducted by the Korea Productivity Center, in partnership with the University of Michigan, is a primary benchmark for consumer sentiment, relying on direct user evaluations to quantify satisfaction levels across more than 30 countries. Analysts and company officials attribute the sustained performance to a strategic pivot toward artificial intelligence (AI)-centered telecommunications and a localized effort to restore consumer confidence following a high-profile cyber intrusion incident in 2025. In the wake of that breach, the carrier implemented a series of network security upgrades and customer

Apr 27, 2026By Lee Kyung-min
SK Telecom extends 29-year run atop customer satisfaction index
previous page
2728293031
next page

Top 5 stories

Korea Times
About Us
Introduction
History
Contact Us
Products & Services
Subscribe
E-paper
RSS Service
Content Sales
Site Map
Policy
Code of Ethics
Ombudsman
Privacy Policy
Youth Protection Policy
Terms of Service
Copyright Policy
Family Site
Hankookilbo
Dongwha Group
FacebookXYoutubeInstagram
CEO & Publisher: Oh Young-jinDigital News Email: webmaster@koreatimes.co.krTel: 02-724-2114Online newspaper registration No: 서울,아52844Date of registration: 2020.02.05Masthead: The Korea TimesCopyright © koreatimes.co.kr. All rights reserved.