my timesThe Korea Times

South Korea

PoliticsDefenseGlobal CommunityEnvironment & AnimalsLaw & CrimeHealthSocietyEducationOthers
  • 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
  • Global Community

    History book pits 2 Korean Catholic martyrs against each other

    3 MIN READBy Jon Dunbar
    History book pits 2 Korean Catholic martyrs against each other
  • 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
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.

Read more

Politics

Lee steps up verbal warning against owners of multiple homes

President Lee Jae Myung said Tuesday that owners of multiple homes should not avoid risks and responsibilities associated with their investments if housing prices are normalized, stepping up his verbal warning against them. Hardening his resolve to stabilize the overheated housing market in the Seoul metropolitan area, Lee shared a link to a news report that pointed to weakening market expectations for housing price increases. "People know that the real estate market, particularly the apartment market in the Seoul metropolitan area, is abnormal and support efforts to normalize it," Lee wrote on the social media platform X. "The government has powerful tools for normalization, including regulations, taxation, finance and supply measures. The issue is whether the authorities have the willingness and determination," he added. Lee said people are free to maintain multiple homes, own properties for investment purposes or hold luxury homes but warned they "cannot avoid the risks and responsibilities that come with the normalization of these abnormalities." Lee has repeatedly urged owners of mul

Feb 24, 2026By Yonhap
Lee steps up verbal warning against owners of multiple homes
Law & Crime

Nat'l Assembly set to vote on arrest motion of ex-DPK lawmaker over alleged bribery

The National Assembly was set to vote Tuesday on an arrest motion for Rep. Kang Sun-woo over bribery allegations related to a nomination by the ruling Democratic Party of Korea (DPK). Kang, now an independent lawmaker who formerly belonged to the DPK, is accused of receiving 100 million won ($68,300) in exchange for supporting the nomination of former Seoul city councilor Kim Kyung as a DPK candidate ahead of the 2022 local elections. Kang was ousted from the party after the allegations surfaced last month. The arrest motion was submitted to the National Assembly earlier this month after prosecutors sought an arrest warrant for Kang. The vote will take place during a plenary session later in the day. By law, sitting lawmakers are immune from arrest while parliament is in session and can only be put under arrest with consent from the National Assembly. The DP, which currently holds a parliamentary majority, has decided not to adopt an official party stance on the motion, allowing its party lawmakers to vote according to their own judgment. If the motion is approved by a majority vote, a cou

Feb 24, 2026By Yonhap
Nat'l Assembly set to vote on arrest motion of ex-DPK lawmaker over alleged bribery
South Korea

1 killed, 3 injured in fire at Seoul's Eunma Apartments

One person was killed and three others injured after a fire broke out at an apartment complex in southern Seoul on Tuesday, authorities said. The fire started at 6:18 a.m. at Eunma Apartments in Daechi-dong, Gangnam District, killing a teenage girl and burning the faces of two other people in the same unit, according to the ward office and firefighting authorities. An upstairs neighbor complained of breathing difficulties due to smoke inhalation, but none of the three injured were in life threatening condition. Around 70 other residents evacuated. The fire was contained some 30 minutes later and extinguished at 7:36 a.m. The police and firefighting service plan to investigate the cause of the fire and determine the scale of damage. Eunma Apartments has long been at the center of the nation's real estate policy debate due to its massive size and location in the wealthy Gangnam district. Built in 1979, the complex failed to win reconstruction approval for years amid safety issues and strife within its reconstruction promotion association, but a plan was finalized last year to build 5,893 new

Feb 24, 2026By Yonhap
1 killed, 3 injured in fire at Seoul's Eunma Apartments
South Korea

Main blaze of wildfire put out in southeastern city of Miryang

The main blaze of a wildfire in the southeastern city of Miryang was put out Tuesday after affecting an area the size of 200 football fields, authorities said. The fire started Monday afternoon on a hill in the city some 280 kilometers southeast of Seoul, forcing the evacuation of dozens of residents and patients at long-term care hospitals, according to forestry and firefighting officials. The main blaze was extinguished at 12:30 p.m. Tuesday after more than 1,500 personnel, 52 helicopters and 318 pieces of equipment were sent to battle the fire, according to the Korea Forest Service. Rain in the morning also helped the effort. The affected area was estimated at 143 hectares, the equivalent of 200 football fields. No casualties or damage to facilities was reported. The National Fire Agency had issued a national firefighting mobilization order, which is given when the scale of the fire is deemed to surpass the firefighting capacity of the local government. Forestry authorities had also ordered a Level 2 wildfire response, which corresponds to when the damage is expected to exceed 100 hectar

Feb 24, 2026By Yonhap
Main blaze of wildfire put out in southeastern city of Miryang
Society

Ruling party pushes 5% profit fine for workplace deaths amid business worries

The ruling Democratic Party of Korea is pressing ahead with a new industrial safety bill that would let regulators fine companies up to 5 percent of their annual operating profit when multiple workers die on the job, despite concerns from business groups. Following the approval of the National Assembly’s Climate, Energy, Environment and Labor Committee last week, the revision to the Occupational Safety and Health Act now heads to the Legislation and Judiciary Committee before a final floor vote. The bill, led by Rep. Kim Ju-young, would for the first to link financial penalties for repeated fatal accidents directly to profitability rather than flat fines. If passed, the labor minister would be able to impose a penalty of up to 5 percent of a firm’s operating profit when three or more workers are killed in industrial accidents in a year and the employer is found to have violated key safety or health obligations. If operating profit is nonexistent, difficult to calculate or deemed too small, authorities could instead levy up to 3 billion won ($2.1 million). “Under the current law, e

Feb 24, 2026By Jung Min-ho
Ruling party pushes 5% profit fine for workplace deaths amid business worries
Politics

Korea has never elected a woman as governor. Will upcoming June election change that?

In 31 years of elected local government under democratic rule, Korea has chosen 87 metropolitan governors and mayors — and every single one has been a man. Since 1995, when the country revived direct regional elections after more than three decades of authoritarian rule that had stripped citizens of the right to pick their own local leaders, women have been shut out of the top tier of provincial power — a record unmatched among major democracies in Asia. With the June 3 local elections now less than 100 days away, at least six women are vying for top regional posts across Seoul, Gyeonggi Province and Daegu, raising hopes that the glass ceiling in Korean local democracy may finally crack. Rep. Choo Mi-ae of the ruling Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) is leading early polls for the Gyeonggi Province governor race, a seat overseeing the country's most populous province. A local media OhmyNews survey conducted between Feb. 13 and 14 by Realmeter put Choo — a six-term lawmaker and former justice minister — at 27 percent among 802 Gyeonggi voters, ahead of incumbent Gov. Kim Dong-yeon

Feb 24, 2026By Lee Hae-rin
Korea has never elected a woman as governor. Will upcoming June election change that?
South Korea

Interim Coupang chief attends closed-door House hearing

WASHINGTON — Harold Rogers, interim CEO of e-commerce giant Coupang Corp., attended a closed-door House hearing in Washington on Monday, as the U.S.-listed firm has been under investigation in South Korea over a massive data leak. Rogers did not respond when asked by reporters if he had anything to say to South Korean consumers, as he appeared for the hearing, which was hosted by the Administrative State, Regulatory Reform and Antitrust Subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee. His appearance came after Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) and Rep. Scott Fitzgerald (R-WI), who chair the House committee and subcommittee, respectively, issued a subpoena to Coupang for testimony before the committee, criticizing the South Korean government's treatment of American firms. Earlier this month, a joint public-private probe into Coupang's data leak found that over 33.6 million customer accounts were affected by the leak.

Feb 24, 2026By Yonhap
Interim Coupang chief attends closed-door House hearing
Society

Korea reports 20th case of African swine fever

Korea confirmed a new African swine fever (ASF) case at a pig farm in the southern county of Euiryeong on Monday, in what marked the 20th case of such an infection in South Korea this season. As part of efforts to prevent additional infections, the Central Disaster and Safety Countermeasures Headquarters plans to conduct an epidemiological investigation and restrict access to the site in the county in South Gyeongsang Province. All pigs at the affected farm will be culled. The country confirmed its first ASF case of the year earlier this month in the eastern city of Gangneung after a two-month hiatus. ASF does not affect humans but is fatal to pigs, and there is currently no vaccine or cure for the disease.

Feb 23, 2026By Yonhap
Korea reports 20th case of African swine fever
Environment & Animals

Korean farmers sue utility giant KEPCO over climate damage to crops

As harvest season approached last November, farmer Ma Yong-un walked through his apple orchard in southern South Korea with a growing sense of dread. The Fuji apples hanging from the trees were pale, lacking the deep red color that signals sweetness and commands a good price. To make matters worse, many were splitting open as they ripened. An unusually rainy fall had blocked the sunlight needed for proper coloring, following one of the hottest summers on record. "I had never seen this kind of cracking before," Ma, 55, told UPI on his farm in Hamyang, a rural county in South Gyeongsang Province. "I was so stressed. I was worried about my family's survival." A late dry spell before the harvest helped salvage some color, but another year of punishing weather had taken its toll. Ma estimated that half his apples were not of good quality. Across South Korea, similar stories have become increasingly common. Farmers are facing mounting losses from heat waves, heavy rainfall, droughts and shifting growing seasons -- impacts scientists widely link to climate change. Now, their experiences are movin

Feb 23, 2026By UPI
Korean farmers sue utility giant KEPCO over climate damage to crops
Defense

Arms procurement agency seeks to pick bidder of new destroyer by July

The state arms procurement agency seeks to choose the bidder to build next-generation destroyers by July, with an aim to deliver the first envisioned vessel to the Navy by the end of 2032, the Defense Acquisition Program Administration (DAPA) said Monday. Under the decision approved at a Defense Project Promotion Committee held earlier in the day, DAPA plans to announce a tender notice for the project to build the country's first fleet of homegrown destroyers in late March and review proposals from May through June before announcing the final winner in July. The landmark project to build six destroyers had been long delayed, due mainly to intensifying competition and a legal feud between rival shipbuilders Hanwha Ocean Co. and HD Hyundai Heavy Industries Co. that had respectively taken part in the concept design and basic design of the envisioned destroyer. HD Hyundai was initially expected to be chosen as the sole-source contractor to build the lead ship but faced protest from Hanwha Ocean over an alleged security leak involving HD Hyundai employees in the ship design process. With the

Feb 23, 2026By Yonhap
Arms procurement agency seeks to pick bidder of new destroyer by July
previous page
229230231232233
next page

Most Read in South Korea