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Choi Won-suk

Korea Times Photo Reporter

Choi Won-suk is a photojournalist at The Korea Times. Before joining the newspaper, he also worked as a photojournalist with AFP and St. Joseph News-Press in Missouri. He spent 13 years in the United States, graduating with a Bachelor of Journalism degree (Cum Laude) from the University of Missouri - Columbia and a Master of Arts in Photography from Ohio University - Athens. Over the past 11 years, Choi covered various news events such as presidential elections, the 2019 North Korea-United States Hanoi Summit and 2022 Qatar World Cup. But above all, Choi believes in local journalism and finds a lot of joy telling life stories of ordinary citizens in small neighborhoods.

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This Day in History: Truman Orders US Forces to Korea

This Day in History: Truman Orders US Forces to KoreaThis Day in History: Truman Orders US Forces to Korea June 27, 1950 The U.S. President's order came after 90,000 North Korean troops invaded South Korea. A U.N. Security Council approved the U.S. resolution that called for an "immediate cessation of hostilities." Truman addressed the nation by television to announce the U.S. intervention in the Korean "conflict." Despite the absence of a Congressional declaration of war, the draft was extended. Three years later to the day, an armistice was signed ending the war at the same division where it began. More than 200,000 North Korean citizens and close to 800,000 communist soldiers died in the war. Official tally of American casualties totaled 36,516. (Wibbitz via Reuters)

Jun 28, 2019By Choi Won-suk
This Day in History: Truman Orders US Forces to Korea
News

"Korean Wave" celebrity couple to split

South Korean actors Song Hye-kyo and Song Joong-ki are splitting up less than two years after their fairytale marriage, the couple said on Thursday (June 27).The co-stars of the 2016 hit television melodrama "Descendants of the Sun" - who played a soldier and doctor who fall in love - planned to seek a divorce due to personality differences."I have begun the arbitration process for divorce from Song Hye-kyo," Song Joong-ki, 33, said in a statement issued by his lawyer. Song Hye-kyo, 37, said in a statement that the two are going through the divorce process due to "differences in personality."The SongSong couple, as they were dubbed by the media, are part of the "Korean Wave" of drama and popular music that has swept through the rest of Asia.Song Hye-kyo, who first gained fame with a role in the 2000 TV series "Autumn in My Heart", was among the guests at a state dinner in Beijing when South Korean President Moon Jae-in visited China in 2017. (Reuters)

Jun 27, 2019By Choi Won-suk
"Korean Wave" celebrity couple to split
News

Kim and Trump impersonators wow Osaka crowds ahead of G20 summit

The impersonators of Kim Jong Un and Donald Trump greeted crowds in a shopping area in Osaka on Wednesday (June 26), two days before world leaders are set to meet at the G20 summit.Howard X, an Australian comedian impersonating North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, was in town with U.S. President Donald Trump impersonator, Dennis Alan, taking selfies with curious onlookers and tasting local delicacies.North Korea is not a G20 nation but U.S. President Donald Trump is set to join the summit on June 28 and 29.Leaders of the world's top 20 economies will arrive in Osaka starting June 27, with the U.S.- China trade war likely to be at the top of the agenda. (Reuters)Howard X, an Australian impersonating North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, and Dennis Alan, impersonator of U.S. President Donald Trump react during a walkabout ahead of the G20 leaders' summit in Osaka, Japan June 26, 2019. Reuters

Jun 27, 2019By Choi Won-suk
Kim and Trump impersonators wow Osaka crowds ahead of G20 summit
News

South Korean model rocks catwalk at 65

65-year-old Kim Chil-doo became a sensation last year when he hit the catwalk for the first time at Seoul Fashion Week. He's now juggling a busy modeling career, one of a generation of seniors in South Korea picking up new skills in order to keep busy or make ends meet. Eve Johnson reports.Meet South Korea's most famous silver fox.Kim Chil-doo doesn't have flawless skin or a perfect pout.But he made a huge splash when he hit the catwalk for the first time in March of last year, strutting his pink net top at Seoul Fashion Week with the effortless confidence of Tyra Banks.Today he's a social media sensation, and is breaking the mold in a country where cosmetic surgery can seem as commonplace as haircuts.It all started last year when the restaurant Kim ran for years went bust.His daughter urged him to follow his lifelong dream, so he enrolled in modeling school.65-YEAR-OLD SOUTH KOREAN PROFESSIONAL MODEL, KIM CHIL-DOO, SAYING:"I believe I made the right choice. Modelling at this age is really fun. Senior? That's just a label."South Korea has the world's fastest agein

Jun 25, 2019By Choi Won-suk
South Korean model rocks catwalk at 65
News

North Korea, China leaders say boosting ties is good for regional peace

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and Chinese President Xi Jinping agreed that amid "serious and complicated" international affairs, developing North Korea and China's relationship is good for both countries and regional peace, North Korean state-run television KRT said on Friday (June 21).The two leaders, meeting in a summit in Pyongyang since Thursday (June 20), agreed to have close strategic communication and deepen cooperation in various fields, KRT news reader said.Kim said Xi's visit is a crucial occasion to show the world the unchanging friendship between North Korea and China, KRT added.Xi arrived in Pyongyang on Thursday for a two-day visit aimed at bolstering an ally under pressure from U.N. sanctions over its nuclear and missile programmes and a breakdown in denuclearisation talks with the United States. (Reuters)A large group callisthenics and art performance is held at the May Day Stadium in Pyongyang, DPRK, June 20, 2019. Xi Jinping, general secretary of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and Chinese president, and hi

Jun 21, 2019By Choi Won-suk
North Korea, China leaders say boosting ties is good for regional peace
News

Xi Jinping and Kim Jong Un hold summit in Pyongyang

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and China's Xi Jinping meet in Pyongyang on Thursday for a summit , as tensions flare between the US and North Korea over efforts to get the North to stop its nuclear weapons program. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un kicked off another major summit on Thursday (June 20).But this time it's not with Donald Trump.Instead, Kim's rolled out the red carpet for President Xi Jinping, marking the first trip by a Chinese leader to Pyongyang in more than a decade.China's the only major ally of North Korea.And Xi's arrival comes as tensions flare once again between the US and North Korea over Trump's efforts to get Pyongyang to ditch its nuclear weapons.Reuters Ben Blanchard has been covering the story from BeijingREUTERS SENIOR CORRESPONDENT BEN BLANCHARD, SAYING:"This is the first visit to North Korea by a Chinese leader since 2005, when then President Hu Jintao went to visit. So it's certainly a big deal in terms of diplomacy between the two countries. Now North Korea's youthful leader Kim Jong Un has visited china about four t

Jun 20, 2019By Choi Won-suk
Xi Jinping and Kim Jong Un hold summit in Pyongyang
Darkroom

Daily life of Pyongyang

In a photo taken on June 15, 2019 children watch as a group of Korean visitors from Japan perform a gymnastic routine on banks of the Taedong river before the landmark Juche tower in Pyongyang. AFP In a photo taken on June 16, 2019 a gild holds an ice cream as a woman takes a bite, next to a street-side food stall in Pyongyang. AFP  A public television screen shows an op-ed text by China's leader Xi Jinping published by North Korea's Rodong Sinmun newspaper, in a public square in Pyongyang on June 19, 2019. AFP Two women walk before North Korean and Chinese flags flying on a street in Pyongyang on June 19, 2019.  A commemorative stamp featuring North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un (L) meeting with China's leader Xi Jinping is pictured at a shop in Pyongyang on June 18, 2019. - Xi Jinping will make the first trip to North Korea by a Chinese president in 14 years this week, state media said on June 18, as Beijing tightens relations with Pyongyang amid tensions with the United States. AFP Two men sit holding North Korean and Chinese flags near Kim Il Sung s

Jun 20, 2019By Choi Won-suk
Daily life of Pyongyang
News

Timelapse of Hong Kong protesters filling the streets

Timelapse videos on Sunday (June 16) show protesters, including young families as well as the elderly, formed a sea of black along roads, walkways and train stations across Hong Kong's financial center to vent their frustration and anger at Hong Kong leader Carrie Lam.Hundreds of thousands of people clogged the streets in central Hong Kong on Sunday dressed in black to demand the city's leader step down, a day after she suspended an extradition bill in a dramatic retreat following the most violent protests in decades.The massive rally saw some protesters carry white carnation flowers, while others held banners saying, "Do not shoot, we are HongKonger," as they sought to avoid a repeat of the violence that rocked the financial center on Wednesday when police fired rubber bullets and tear gas.Loud cheers rang out when activists called through loud hailers for Lam to step down. Protesters also chanted "pursue the black police," angry at what they say was an overreaction by police that left more than 70 people injured in Wednesday's violent protest. (Reuters)

Jun 18, 2019By Choi Won-suk
Timelapse of Hong Kong protesters filling the streets
News

Carrie Lam issues apology to angry HK protesters

Hong Kong's leader Carrie Lam has apologized to the public as swarms of people - dressed in black - marched through the city on Sunday (June 16), protesting her controversial extradition bill and calling for her to step down.Lam indefinitely delayed the bill on Saturday in a dramatic retreat. But it wasn't enough to stop this 'sea of black' descending onto the streets.REUTERS' JAMES POMFRET SAYING:''To be honest, everyone I spoke to today was in no mood to give her a second chance. The protestors today are absolutely peaceful. There's no violence at all, But they are angry and they are indignant. And they are not happy at all with Hong Kong's chief executive Carrie Lam.''It was a different story earlier this week when demonstrators were met with tear gas and rubber bullets from Hong Kong police.More than 70 people were injured, prompting Sunday's demonstrators to bring along banners like these, asking police not to shoot.PROTESTOR:''It's a very saddening time. But it's good that we can see people getting united and they all stand together as one.''White

Jun 17, 2019By Choi Won-suk
Carrie Lam issues apology to angry HK protesters
Darkroom

Hong Kong demands democracy

Protesters march on the streets against an extradition bill in Hong Kong on Sunday, June 16, 2019. Hong Kong residents were gathering Sunday for another massive protest over an unpopular extradition bill that has highlighted the territory's apprehension about relations with mainland China, a week after the crisis brought as many as 1 million into the streets. AP Police officers fire tear gas during a demonstration against a proposed extradition bill in Hong Kong, China June 12, 2019. Reuters Riot police fire tear gas toward protesters outside the Legislative Council in Hong Kong, Wednesday, June 12, 2019. Hong Kong police have used tear gas and high-pressure hoses against thousands of protesters opposing a highly controversial extradition bill outside government headquarters. AP Police officers stand surrounded by tear gas during a rally by protesters against a controversial extradition law proposal outside the government headquarters in Hong Kong on June 12, 2019. - Violent clashes broke out in Hong Kong on June 12 as police tried to stop protesters storming the city'

Jun 13, 2019By Choi Won-suk
Hong Kong demands democracy
  • Hong Kong police condemned for handling of extradition bill protests
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