
Presidential spokesman Kim Eui-kyum announces President Moon Jae-in's nomination of five new ministers at Cheong Wa Dae on Aug. 30. Yonhap
President Moon Jae-in on Thursday nominated five new ministers of defense, education, industry, labor and gender equality in his first Cabinet shakeup.
Jeong Kyeong-doo, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, was tapped to replace Defense Minister Song Young-moo, who came under fire over mishandling a controversy surrounding a defense intelligence unit.
If appointed, Jeong will be the first Air Force general to become the country's defense chief in more than two decades.
Moon also named Rep. Yoo Eun-hae of the ruling Democratic Party as the new education minister. Sung Yun-mo, the incumbent chief of the Korea Intellectual Property Office, was nominated as the new minister of trade, industry and energy.
Lee Jae-kap, a former vice minister of labor, was tapped as the new labor minister, with Jin Sun-mee, a ruling party lawmaker, named the new minister of gender equality and family.

The newly-nominated ministers are (from left) Yoo Eun-hae as the Education Minister, Jeong Kyeong-doo as the Defense Minister, Sung Yun-mo as the Trade, Industry and Energy Minister, Lee Jae-kap as the Labor Minister, and Jin Sun-mee as the Gender Equality and Family Minister.
The minister nominees have to undergo parliamentary confirmation hearings, though their appointments do not require parliamentary approval.
The defense minister has been dogged for months by a controversy over a 2016 proposal from the Defense Security Command (DSC) to invoke martial law to curb anti-government protests.
The military spy agency is set to be reorganized as a smaller, strictly intelligence-gathering unit.
Minister Song has been criticized for his failure to take necessary steps in response to the DSC report.
The first cabinet reshuffle since Moon's inauguration in May 2017 also involves four vice ministerial-level officials.
Wang Jung-hong, the incumbent secretary-general of the Board of Audit and Inspection, was appointed the new head of the Defense Acquisition Program Administration, while Chung Jae-suk, a senior writer from a local daily, was named the head of the Cultural Heritage Administration.
The others were Yang Hyang-ja and Rhee Suk-soo, who were respectively appointed the new head of the Central Officials Training Institute and head of the Office of Planning and Coordination at the spy agency, the National Intelligence Service. (Yonhap)