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  • Society

    Murder suspect's father evades charges, fueling debate over Korea's family evidence-tampering exemption

    The father of Jang Yoon-gi, a suspect in the murder of a high school girl, allegedly destroyed evidence in the case, renewing debate over Korea's criminal code exemption shielding family members from evidence-tampering charges. Last month, prosecutors indicted Jang, 23, on charges of stabbing and killing the girl in Gwangju in May after following her with intent to rape. He was also indicted on charges of attacking another student with a knife when they tried to intervene. Investigators later found that Jang's father, an active-duty police officer, had disposed of items from his son's residence, including several mobile phones and a sex doll whose chest and neck areas showed concentrated damage. The father was not indicted, however. Under current law, destroying evidence in another person's criminal case carries penalties of up to five years in prison or a fine of up to 7 million won ($4,530), but relatives or family members living with the offender are exempt. Lee Yung-hyeock, a professor of police science at Konkuk University, said the exemption exists in Korea because of questions whe

    2 MIN READBy Park Ung
    Murder suspect's father evades charges, fueling debate over Korea's family evidence-tampering exemption
  • Environment & Animals

    From toilet to blanket: 1-meter snake found inside Korean apartment

    1 MIN READBy Hankookilbo
    From toilet to blanket: 1-meter snake found inside Korean apartment
  • Society

    Why a Mongolian computer engineering student is leaving Korea for China

    6 MIN READBy Hankookilbo
    Why a Mongolian computer engineering student is leaving Korea for China
  • Global Community

    How Korea’s birth mothers are exposing the hidden cost of overseas adoption

    3 MIN READBy Anne Mai Bertelsen
    How Korea’s birth mothers are exposing the hidden cost of overseas adoption
  • Law & Crime

    3rd appeals trial begins for former K-pop star Steve Yoo over visa denial

    2 MIN READBy Hankookilbo
    3rd appeals trial begins for former K-pop star Steve Yoo over visa denial
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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.

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Others

Lotte World Tower to go dark as major Korean companies join Earth Hour

Lotte World Tower, GS25 and other Korean companies will join the “Earth Hour” campaign and switch off their lights for an hour on the last Saturday of March to raise awareness about the severity of climate change and environmental destruction. Earth Hour began in Australia in 2007 and marks its 20th year this year. Hosted by one of the world’s largest environmental organizations, the campaign calls for lights to be turned off around the world for one hour from 8:30 p.m. on the last Saturday of March each year to draw attention to efforts seeking to protect the planet from climate change. The campaign takes place in over 180 countries, with famous landmarks such as the Eiffel Tower in Paris and the Sydney Opera House. In Korea, Lotte World Tower having participated for nine years since 2018. Lotte Group said about 50 tenants and operators at Lotte World Tower and Mall will also take part, with Signiel Seoul joining the campaign for the first time this year. The hotel plans to keep lighting in common areas to a minimum and encourage guests to switch off lights. Lotte World Tower and

Mar 27, 2026By Hankookilbo
Lotte World Tower to go dark as major Korean companies join Earth Hour
Defense

40 Korean reservists remain aboard ship in Strait of Hormuz amid tensions

Forty South Korean nationals who are serving as onboard ship reserve service members are currently aboard ships in the Strait of Hormuz, the chief of the military manpower agency said Friday, vowing to closely monitor their safety amid the Middle East conflict. The onboard ship reserve service refers to a form of alternative military service, which allows qualified mariners and engineers to serve aboard commercial vessels for three years instead of serving the usual 18-month mandatory service at military units. "Forty (personnel) are aboard 17 ships in the Strait of Hormuz and continue to work there, without requesting to leave their respective ships," Hong So-young, chief of the Military Manpower Administration (MMA), told reporters when asked about the impact of the Middle East crisis on the military manpower policy. "We are monitoring the situation on a daily basis, alongside the oceans ministry and an industry organization, and paying close attention to their safety and necessities," Hong said. There were a total of 2,798 personnel deployed as onboard ship reserve service members as

Mar 27, 2026By Yonhap
40 Korean reservists remain aboard ship in Strait of Hormuz amid tensions
Politics

Lee's approval rating falls to 65%: poll

President Lee Jae Myung's approval rating fell to 65 percent after reaching its highest level for three consecutive weeks, a poll showed Friday. The survey by Gallup Korea, conducted Tuesday through Thursday on 1,000 respondents aged 18 and over, showed that the positive assessment of Lee's overall performance fell by 2 percentage points from the previous week. The negative assessment stood at 24 percent, while 10 percent said they were undecided. Lee's handling of the economy and people's livelihoods were cited most frequently as the reason for positive evaluation at 17 percent, followed by overall performance at 10 percent, and diplomacy and his real estate policies each at 8 percent. Among the negative responses, 17 percent pointed to concerns over the economy and the high exchange rate. The approval rating for the ruling Democratic Party remained unchanged at 46 percent, while that of the main opposition People Power Party fell 1 percentage point to 19 percent, marking the first time it fell below the 20 percent mark in eight months. In the same survey, 54 percent of the respondents re

Mar 27, 2026By Yonhap
Lee's approval rating falls to 65%: poll
Defense

Korea, US hold joint live-fire drills involving drones

Korean and U.S. troops have conducted a combined arms live-fire exercise involving reconnaissance drones, the U.S. Army stationed in Korea said Friday, in apparent efforts to strengthen their interoperability while incorporating new technologies. Some 900 troops from both sides took part in the drills that concluded earlier this week at the Rodriguez Live Fire Complex in Pocheon, about 30 kilometers south of the Demilitarized Zone separating the two Koreas, according to the U.S. 2nd Infantry Division. Among the personnel taking part in the drills were paratroopers from the 11th Airborne Division based in Alaska, the military unit said, saying their deployment for the exercise "highlights a force not bound by distance." Under the training scenario, reconnaissance drones identified enemy positions, followed by a multi-domain assault involving launches of the South's 81-millimeter mortars and U.S. 60-mm mortars, as well as precision strikes by U.S. Army Apache helicopters. On the ground, K2 battle tanks and K21 infantry fighting vehicles supported the assault by closing in on the enemy. "By

Mar 27, 2026By Yonhap
Korea, US hold joint live-fire drills involving drones
Global Community

Korea overhauls anti-trafficking policy to protect foreign workers more effectively

Korea has announced a major overhaul of its anti-trafficking policy, unveiling new measures to promptly identify and protect victims — especially foreign seasonal and maritime workers. The plan, revealed Friday by the Ministry of Gender Equality and Family, comes after years of criticism over the slow detection and recognition of such abuse cases, particularly in low-wage migrant labor. Rights activists have long argued that official victim numbers vastly understate the real scale of abuse in Korea. Between 2023 and March 2026, the government formally recognized only 70 people as “victims of trafficking,” 58 of whom are foreign nationals. A strict legal definition of trafficking is the reason that most officially confirmed victims are noncitizens — that the crime requires elements such as “movement of the person,” including cross-border movement. Under the reforms, police, labor and other ministries will tighten cooperation and share relevant information. When frontline officials encounter possible victims during inspections or investigations, they should immediately link the

Mar 27, 2026By Jung Min-ho
Korea overhauls anti-trafficking policy to protect foreign workers more effectively
Law & Crime

Court grants arrest warrant for drug trafficker repatriated from Philippines

UIJEONGBU — A local court on Friday issued an arrest warrant for a notorious drug trafficker repatriated from the Philippines earlier this week. The Uijeongbu District Court granted the arrest warrant for Park Wang-yeol, citing risk of flight and destruction of evidence. Facing charges of smuggling methamphetamine and other drugs into the country, he arrived in South Korea in handcuffs on Wednesday and was immediately taken into police custody in a temporary repatriation under an extradition treaty between the two countries. The 48-year-old has been serving a 60-year prison sentence in the Philippines for the murders of three South Koreans. During police questioning, Park admitted to taking methamphetamine after testing positive for the drug, according to the Gyeonggi Bukbu Provincial Police. Police have apprehended 236 suspects in connection with Park's smuggling operation, including 42 members of his organization and drug buyers. Authorities plan to continue their investigation into Park for additional drug-related crimes while he remains in custody. Meanwhile, police disclosed the iden

Mar 27, 2026By Yonhap
Court grants arrest warrant for drug trafficker repatriated from Philippines
Politics

Lee honors fallen troops in West Sea, vows to build peace with strong defense capabilities

President Lee Jae Myung on Friday paid his respects to honor 55 South Korean service members killed during military clashes with North Korea while defending the West Sea maritime border, vowing to build peace on the Korean Peninsula with strong defense capabilities. Lee made the remarks in a speech marking the 11th West Sea Defense Day at the national cemetery in Daejeon, about 140 kilometers south of Seoul, which honored the 55 sailors and Marines killed in clashes with North Korea near the Northern Limit Line (NLL) — the de facto maritime border between the two Koreas. "I believe that firmly protecting our people and the territory of the Republic of Korea with strong national defense and creating a peaceful Korean Peninsula free from fear of war is the historic mission left to us by the heroes who defended the West Sea," Lee said. "Peace, a state in which there is no need to fight, is the most certain form of security, though it is difficult to achieve," he added. Lee also pledged efforts to end confrontation and tensions and to "write a new chapter" of shared growth and prosperity i

Mar 27, 2026By Yonhap
Lee honors fallen troops in West Sea, vows to build peace with strong defense capabilities
Society

Lee Geun-an, infamous torture interrogator, dies at 88

Lee Geun-an, a former police investigator who became a symbol of state violence under Korea's military dictatorship and was known as the regime's "master torturer," died Wednesday. He was 88. Lee joined the police force in 1970 and later served as a counter-espionage investigator. During the 1980s, he extracted false confessions from suspects through electric shock and water torture while investigating cases involving alleged communist sympathizers. Among his victims was the late Kim Geun-tae, a former health and welfare minister who suffered lasting health complications. His name and face became publicly known only in 1988 through media reports, prompting him to submit his resignation by mail and vanish. After 11 years as a fugitive, he turned himself in in 1999 and was tried on charges of illegally detaining and torturing fishermen abducted to North Korea and sentenced to seven years in prison. Released in 2006, he briefly served as a Protestant pastor before being removed from the ministry in 2012, the same year he drew public outrage at a memoir launch saying, “At the time, I thou

Mar 27, 2026By Park Ung
Lee Geun-an, infamous torture interrogator, dies at 88
Law & Crime

Police refer lawmaker to prosecution for alleged sexual harassment

Police said Friday they have referred Rep. Jang Kyung-tae to the prosecution over allegations that he sexually harassed a female aide of another lawmaker. Jang, an independent who left the ruling Democratic Party of Korea last week amid the scandal, is accused of sexually harassing the aide during a staff dinner at a restaurant in Seoul's Yeouido in October 2024. Police opened an investigation after the aide filed a complaint last year. Last week, a police committee convened at the lawmaker's request recommended that he be referred to prosecutors over the allegations. The committee also recommended referral following further investigation regarding allegations that he inflicted "secondary harm" by exposing the aide's identity. Jang has been referred to the prosecution on both counts, the Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency said. He has denied the allegations and vowed to prove his innocence.

Mar 27, 2026By Yonhap
Police refer lawmaker to prosecution for alleged sexual harassment
Defense

JCS chief attends France-led multinational military meeting over Hormuz Strait

The chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) has attended a multinational military meeting to discuss the safety of maritime navigation in the Strait of Hormuz, a JCS official said Friday, as Iran has effectively blocked the key oil trade route amid a prolonged Middle East conflict. The French defense ministry said Thursday (local time) that around 35 countries took part in the teleconference, led by its Armed Forces Chief Fabien Mandon, stressing the talks were defensive in nature. It did not name the participants. The JCS confirmed the attendance of Chairman Gen. Jin Yong-sung, while striking a prudent tone on future developments. "The meeting was aimed at sharing the notion the safe navigation in the Strait of Hormuz is important for the security and economy of respective countries," a JCS official said. "The defense ministry and the JCS will continue communication for joint efforts while closely monitoring movements of the international community in regard to the Strait of Hormuz," the official added. Noting that the meeting centered on rudimentary discussions surrounding the issue

Mar 27, 2026By Yonhap
JCS chief attends France-led multinational military meeting over Hormuz Strait
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