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  • Law & Crime

    Bill targets deportation of drug, phishing offenders

    A group of conservative legislators has introduced a bill that would allow the government to deport foreigners convicted of drug, sex or voice phishing offenses even if they don’t receive prison sentences. The amendment to the Immigration Act, submitted on Thursday by Rep. Kim Tae-ho and 11 other lawmakers of the main opposition People Power Party, seeks to expand the legal grounds for deportation beyond the current standard, which hinges on the imposition of a custodial sentence. Under existing law, foreign nationals can be ordered to leave only if they receive a prison sentence — including a suspended one — and that the decision is final. “There has been criticism that the current requirement of ‘a sentence of imprisonment or heavier’ as a condition for deporting foreign offenders is excessively narrow,” the conservative party legislators said. “In particular, some people point out that the law should be amended so that foreign nationals can be deported even when they have not been given an actual prison sentence in cases involving sex crimes, drug offenses and voice

    2 MIN READBy Jung Min-ho
    Bill targets deportation of drug, phishing offenders
  • Politics

    Lee says mega development projects are for future, not approval ratings

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Lee says mega development projects are for future, not approval ratings
  • Politics

    Ruling DPK expresses 'strong regret' over recent US House report regarding Coupang

    2 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Ruling DPK expresses 'strong regret' over recent US House report regarding Coupang
  • Law & Crime

    Police search Gwangju high school after bomb threat amid baseball trash talk controversy

    2 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Police search Gwangju high school after bomb threat amid baseball trash talk controversy
  • Law & Crime

    2 illegal gambling network operators extradited from UAE in joint gov't operation

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    2 illegal gambling network operators extradited from UAE in joint gov't operation
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Law & Crime

Brazilian woman indicted for stalking BTS member Jungkook

Prosecutors said Tuesday they have indicted a Brazilian national while in custody for allegedly stalking Jungkook of K-pop boy group BTS and trespassing at his residence in Seoul. The Seoul Western District Prosecutors Office said it indicted the woman, in her 30s, last week on charges of violating the Act on Punishment of Stalking Crimes and trespassing. The suspect allegedly visited Jungkook's home around 20 times, pressing the doorbell or leaving letters from December to January. The Brazilian national told prosecutors that she committed such acts "out of love for Jungkook." The woman was initially caught in the act and arrested in December but was later released. Police had prohibited her from coming within 100 meters of the star's residence in Seoul's Yongsan District. Police referred her to prosecutors in February after she continued attempting to visit Jungkook's home.

Mar 3, 2026By Yonhap
Brazilian woman indicted for stalking BTS member Jungkook
Politics

Main opposition party stages rally against passage of DPK-led judicial reform bills

Lawmakers of the main opposition People Power Party (PPP) staged a rally Tuesday in protest of a set of controversial judicial reform bills passed by the National Assembly, led by the ruling Democratic Party of Korea. About 80 PPP lawmakers and party officials gathered at the National Assembly in western Seoul at 2 p.m. and began marching through Gwanghwamun Square before heading toward Cheong Wa Dae, in what the party described as a rally aimed at defending judicial independence and constitutional order. PPP leader Jang Dong-hyeok denounced the bills as measures that would "destroy the judiciary" and ultimately pave the way for a dictatorship under President Lee Jae Myung. "I strongly urge President Lee Jae Myung to abandon his dreams of a long-term dictatorship and exercise his veto power against the three judicial destruction bills to uphold the constitutional order." The three bills seek to establish a new offense of "legal distortion," allow constitutional appeals of court rulings and increase the number of Supreme Court justices from the current 14 to 26. The PPP has questioned whet

Mar 3, 2026By Yonhap
Main opposition party stages rally against passage of DPK-led judicial reform bills
Law & Crime

Court holds arrest warrant hearings for lawmaker, ex-councilor over alleged bribery

A court on Tuesday held hearings to decide whether to issue arrest warrants for an independent lawmaker and a former Seoul city councilor over bribery allegations linked to the 2022 local elections. The Seoul Central District Court convened the separate hearings for Rep. Kang Sun-woo, formerly of the ruling Democratic Party Korea (DPK), and former councilor Kim Kyung after prosecutors requested warrants for their arrests early last month. Kang is accused of receiving 100 million won ($68,200) in cash from Kim ahead of the 2022 elections allegedly in exchange for her support for Kim's nomination as a DPK candidate for the Seoul city council at the time. "I apologize for causing concern to the people," Kang told reporters before attending her hearing. "I will sincerely make an explanation in the courtroom." The court is expected to make a decision on their arrests as early as later in the day. Kang has claimed that she did not know the shopping bag Kim gave her at the time contained cash, adding that she returned the money after discovering it three months later. Police believe Kang had met

Mar 3, 2026By Yonhap
Court holds arrest warrant hearings for lawmaker, ex-councilor over alleged bribery
South Korea

Investigators try again to raid opposition party over ties to religious sect

Investigators launched a second attempt Tuesday to raid the headquarters of the main opposition People Power Party (PPP) over suspicions a religious sect meddled in its primaries for the 2022 presidential election and the 2024 parliamentary elections, legal sources said. The investigators on a joint prosecution-police team had tried to execute a search warrant at the PPP headquarters in western Seoul last Friday but withdrawn after an hourslong standoff with party officials. The raid also targets a company handling the party's membership list. The Shincheonji Church of Jesus, a nonmainstream religious sect, is suspected of forcing tens of thousands of its followers to become dues-paying members of the PPP in order to sway the results of the 2022 and 2024 elections. Investigators have reportedly obtained testimony that Shincheonji's leaders urged party membership by citing the need to "return the favor to Yoon Suk Yeol," who, as prosecutor general in 2020, had dismissed search warrants for a Shincheonji church in the southeastern city of Daegu when it was targeted as an epicenter of COVI

Mar 3, 2026By Yonhap
Investigators try again to raid opposition party over ties to religious sect
Others

Middle East conflict raises alarm on Korea's oil dependence

The U.S.-Israel attack on Iran and Tehran’s retaliatory strikes across the Middle East have turned the Strait of Hormuz into a critical flash point, reigniting concerns over Korea’s heavy dependence on energy imports from the region. With the strategic waterway accounting for roughly 27 percent of global seaborne oil trade, fears are mounting that any disruption could jolt energy markets and threaten supply stability. In the aftermath of the attack, the government said Tuesday it will seek to secure oil supplies from outside the Middle East in response to a possible closure of the Strait of Hormuz, while emphasizing that Korea currently holds sufficient oil reserves. While the U.S. military Central Command denies the strait has been closed, Iran’s Revolutionary Guard has been escalating their threats against shipments, saying they “will set those ships ablaze,” raising the specter of a prolonged disruption to one of the world’s most vital oil export routes. Any closure would directly disrupt crude oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) shipments from the Persian Gulf. Korea reli

Mar 3, 2026By Lee Gyu-lee
Middle East conflict raises alarm on Korea's oil dependence
Global Community

Korea to expand visa benefits for foreign brain and talent

Korea will expand the scope of "top-tier visas" for high-tech foreign talent and create a new visa program for foreign technicians to address the low birth rate and aging population, the Ministry of Justice said Tuesday. Minister of Justice Jung Sung-ho held a press briefing to announce the new visa measures to be pushed as part of the nation's immigration policy strategy for the 2030s. The top-tier visa issuance is now limited to personnel from companies in eight cutting-edge industries, including semiconductors, artificial intelligence and robotics. But the scope of the top-tier visas will be expanded to include professors and researchers in the science and technology fields, the ministry said. The ministry also said it will create the "K-Core visa" to enable domestic technical colleges to systematically foster foreign talent with intermediate technical skills, thereby alleviating the labor shortage in the local manufacturing industry. The government will provide foreigners with information on employment and entrepreneurship in depopulation regions and establish a regional immigration p

Mar 3, 2026By Yonhap
Korea to expand visa benefits for foreign brain and talent
Defense

Gov’t begins evacuation measures for Koreans in Middle East

The government is evacuating some Korean nationals from parts of the Middle East as tensions in the region escalate, while withholding specific details for safety reasons, officials said Tuesday. About 21,000 Korean nationals are currently in 13 countries across the region. Prime Minister Kim Min-seok said the protection of overseas nationals must remain the government’s top priority as uncertainty grows. “The protection of our nationals abroad is the government’s top priority,” Kim said during a Cabinet meeting at Government Complex Seoul. “Please ensure that evacuation measures and response plans for residents in the affected countries are thoroughly prepared.” He added that relevant ministries must be ready to act if conditions worsen. “The Ministry of National Defense has reported that military transport aircraft and other assets are on standby,” Kim said. “We must be prepared to respond immediately, should circumstances require it.” The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and lawmakers gave a briefing at a meeting between the ruling party and government earlier in the day

Mar 3, 2026By Bahk Eun-ji
Gov’t begins evacuation measures for Koreans in Middle East
Society

Iranians in Korea express mixed reactions to death of Khamenei

The Iran that Park Si-ma remembers was once described as the “Paris of the Middle East,” a place where women wore miniskirts instead of hijabs and some residents flew abroad for weekend shopping trips. That changed in 1979, when the Iranian Revolution toppled the Pahlavi dynasty and ushered in the Islamic Republic — the same year Park moved to Korea with the husband she had met in Iran. The revolution transformed Iranian society and governance, ending decades of secular, Western-oriented rule and replacing it with a theocratic system that reshaped everyday life and cultural norms. Since 2009, the Iranian Network in Korea (INK) has carried out activities from Korea opposing the Iranian government. On Saturday, too, Park and about 70 other Iranians held a rally in Seoul condemning Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei. That same day, Khamenei was killed in coordinated U.S.-Israeli airstrikes on his central Tehran compound — a dramatic escalation in hostilities that marked one of the most significant military operations in the long-running conflict and triggered retaliator

Mar 3, 2026By Park Ung
Iranians in Korea express mixed reactions to death of Khamenei
South Korea

Spy agency launches 24-hr emergency response team in response to Middle East crisis

The National Intelligence Service (NIS) has launched an around-the-clock emergency response team to monitor developments in the Middle East following U.S.-Israeli strikes against Iran and assist with the safe evacuation of nationals from the region, officials said Tuesday. The NIS is in cooperation with other spy agencies of like-minded countries to conduct the monitoring, officials said, amid escalating tensions after recent attacks by the United States and Israel on Iran, which killed Iran's supreme leader and prompted retaliatory strikes on U.S. bases in the Middle East. Officials said the NIS is also closely tracking potential supply chain risk factors and providing relevant information to government agencies, while reviewing the latest conditions in the energy, logistics, defense manufacturing and shipbuilding industries following the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. On the day of the attack on Iran last Saturday, the NIS also formed a task force led by its director to hold an emergency situation assessment meeting every day, officials said.

Mar 3, 2026By Yonhap
Spy agency launches 24-hr emergency response team in response to Middle East crisis
Campus

Chonnam National University holds AI training camp for incoming freshmen

Chonnam National University said it has wrapped up a special artificial intelligence (AI) training camp for incoming freshmen, part of its Glocal University 30 initiative to boost students’ AI skills before they start academic courses at the campus. The education innovation office and the university’s software-centered academic affairs team jointly ran the AI Capability Enhancement Program for Prospective Freshmen, which took place from Feb. 2 to Feb. 12 and drew 117 early admission students. The program was designed to make productive use of the time between high school graduation and university entrance and to help the new students acquire essential AI literacy. The course was divided into two major strands: generative AI and physical AI. In the generative AI segment, students used leading AI platforms to design business models and took part in “vibe coding” workshops that let them build their own websites using natural language prompts, even without prior coding experience. The physical AI segment focused on hands-on work that blended software and hardware. Students learned p

Mar 3, 2026By Jhoo Dong-chan
Chonnam National University holds AI training camp for incoming freshmen
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