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  • Environment & Animals

    Korea overhauls heat wave alert system for 1st time in 18 years

    Korea has overhauled its heat wave warning system for the first time in 18 years, introducing a new top-tier alert aimed at providing earlier warnings as increasingly extreme summer temperatures pose greater health risks. The Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA) activated the revised system on Wednesday, replacing the previous two-tier structure with a three-stage framework consisting of a heat wave advisory, heat wave warning and the newly created severe heat wave warning. Under the previous system, a heat wave advisory was issued when the perceived temperature was forecast to remain above 33 degrees Celsius for at least two consecutive days, while a warning required apparent temperatures of 35 degrees or higher for two days. The new highest-level alert, however, can be issued if the perceived temperature is expected to reach 38 degrees or if the actual air temperature reaches 39 degrees for just one day, allowing authorities to respond immediately without waiting for prolonged extreme heat. The KMA said the change reflects the growing threat posed by unprecedented heat waves, whic

    2 MIN READBy Anna J. Park
    Korea overhauls heat wave alert system for 1st time in 18 years
  • Society

    Foreign cruise visitors to Korea top 200,000 in May

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Foreign cruise visitors to Korea top 200,000 in May
  • Politics

    Lee's approval rating inches up after 6-week decline: poll

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Lee's approval rating inches up after 6-week decline: poll
  • Society

    New superintendents put teacher protection at top of policy agenda

    2 MIN READBy Jung Da-hyun
    New superintendents put teacher protection at top of policy agenda
  • Politics

    Government eyes new fund to invest tax windfall from AI-driven chip boom

    2 MIN READBy Yi Whan-woo
    Government eyes new fund to invest tax windfall from AI-driven chip boom
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Health

Korea reports 4th African swine fever case as virus spreads nationwide

Korea on Tuesday confirmed its fourth case of African swine fever (ASF) this year, prompting authorities to step up containment measures nationwide. The latest case was detected at a pig farm in the county of Yeonggwang, South Jeolla Province, which raises some 21,000 pigs, according to the Ministry of Agriculture, Food and Rural Affairs. The government is taking necessary steps to prevent the spread of the virus, including the culling of affected pigs. It has also issued a 48-hour standstill order for all pig farms and related facilities nationwide, effective through Wednesday. The country confirmed its first ASF case of the year earlier this month in the eastern city of Gangneung after a two-month hiatus, followed by two additional cases last week in Anseong and Pocheon, both in Gyeonggi Province. "As African swine fever is spreading to areas previously considered safe, the current situation is more serious than ever," the ministry said in a statement. It urged local governments, livestock-related organizations and pig farmers to implement intensive disinfection and quarantine measures.

Jan 27, 2026By Yonhap
Korea reports 4th African swine fever case as virus spreads nationwide
Global Community

Korea moves to stamp out wage theft as migrant workers remain vulnerable

Korean labor officials are intensifying their crackdown on employers who deliberately withhold wages, elevating such offenses to the level of a “grave social crime” that disproportionately targets the country’s vulnerable migrant workforce. The campaign reflects a growing urgency to protect basic livelihood rights as evidence emerges of systemic pay theft targeting foreign laborers. The Ministry of Employment and Labor announced on Tuesday that it opened investigations into 1,350 incidents in 2025, including 14 especially serious cases that resulted in the arrest of employers. Search operations rose by nearly 30 percent from the previous year, a surge officials said was necessary to expose those who intentionally exploit foreign staff often unfamiliar with local legal protections. In one case, a pig farm owner in South Jeolla Province was arrested in April 2025 on charges of assaulting foreign workers and withholding 260 million won ($180,000) in wages and severance pay. Prosecutors allege that the owner systematically cheated 62 employees, leveraging their precarious immigration

Jan 27, 2026By Jung Min-ho
Korea moves to stamp out wage theft as migrant workers remain vulnerable
South Korea

Public institutions to boost hiring to 6-year high in 2026: finance ministry

State-run and state-funded institutions plan to carry out their largest recruitment in six years in 2026 as part of efforts to expand job opportunities for young people, the finance ministry said Tuesday. Public institutions plan to hire around 28,000 employees this year, up about 4,000 from last year and the highest level since 2020, according to the Ministry of Economy and Finance. Youth internship positions, which serve as a stepping stone to full-time employment, totaled 24,000, up 3,000 from a year earlier. "Youth employment is not just an employment issue but a growth engine that will carry the country's future and the foundation of hope," Finance Minister Koo Yun-cheol said in his speech during a job fair in Seoul.

Jan 27, 2026By Yonhap
Public institutions to boost hiring to 6-year high in 2026: finance ministry
Law & Crime

Court allows live broadcast of ruling on ex-first lady's corruption case

A court on Tuesday allowed live broadcasts of this week's ruling on the corruption and bribery case of former first lady Kim Keon Hee. The Seoul Central District Court said it accepted broadcasters' request to air the verdict, which will be delivered at a hearing scheduled for 2:10 p.m. Wednesday. The court typically allows live broadcasts in consideration of the public interest. Special counsel Min Joong-ki's team has requested a 15-year prison term for Kim on charges of violating the Capital Market Act, the Political Funds Act and a law on the acceptance of bribes for mediation. The wife of ousted former President Yoon Suk Yeol is accused of conspiring with a former head of Deutsch Motors, a BMW dealer in Korea, as well as a close associate, to manipulate the company's stock price and make 810 million won ($559,000) in illegal profits between 2010 and 2012. Kim is also suspected of receiving free opinion polls worth 270 million won, together with her husband, from a self-proclaimed power broker ahead of the 2022 presidential election. The opinion polls were allegedly conducted in exchang

Jan 27, 2026By Yonhap
Court allows live broadcast of ruling on ex-first lady's corruption case
Society

Lost in translation: Local dialects pose hurdle for 6 in 10 non-skilled foreign workers

It turns out that for foreign workers here, mastering the Korean language is only half the battle — the other half is figuring out if you’re supposed to treat your boss like a deity or a drinking buddy. A new study reveals that 60 percent of foreign workers in Korea are marooned by the local lingo, challenged by regional linguistic nuances. According to a report released last week by the Human Resources Development Service of Korea, based on a survey of 1,067 E-9 visa holders last year, regional dialects and honorific speech emerged as the main communication barriers, cited by 63.9 percent and 60.4 percent, respectively. Korea’s linguistic map is carved by its geography, with mountain ranges long isolating five primary regional dialects: the Gyeonggi (standard Seoul), Gangwon, Chungcheong, Gyeongsang and Jeolla groups. The dialect of Jeju Island is so distinct that some linguists consider it a language in its own right. This regional variety is further layered by a rigid system of honorifics — a grammatical hierarchy of respect that dictates verb endings and vocabulary based on a

Jan 27, 2026By Park Ung
Lost in translation: Local dialects pose hurdle for 6 in 10 non-skilled foreign workers
South Korea

Cabinet approves S. Korea's military intel-sharing pact with Canada

The Cabinet on Tuesday approved South Korea's military intelligence-sharing pact with Canada, a move to provide a legal framework for closer security and defense industry cooperation between the two nations. The approval came about three months after President Lee Jae Myung and Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney agreed on the deal during their summit in late October on the sidelines of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in Gyeongju. The agreement is aimed at making it easier for the two sides to share classified military and defense information. It does not require parliamentary ratification and is expected to take effect once both governments complete the necessary administrative steps. Once in force, the pact will support broader cooperation in areas such as defense procurement, industrial security, research and operational coordination, according to a joint statement released after the October summit. South Korea has been seeking to strengthen defense industry cooperation with Canada, as it eyes a multibillion-dollar Canadian submarine project. A Korean consortium, led by Hanw

Jan 27, 2026By Yonhap
Cabinet approves S. Korea's military intel-sharing pact with Canada
South Korea

Special prosecutors raid labor ministry over Coupang's unpaid severance pay

A special counsel team raided the labor ministry Tuesday as part of its compulsory investigation into allegations of unpaid severance pay for Coupang employees. Special counsel Ann Gweon-seob sent prosecutors and investigators to the ministry's headquarters in the central city of Sejong in the morning to secure data related to its policy guidelines on Coupang's severance pay dispute. Mobile phones of some ministry officials in charge of labor and retirement pay policies were seized, and the Seoul Regional Employment and Labor Office was also included in the search and seizure warrant, Ann's office said. Coupang Fulfillment Services, a logistics subsidiary of Coupang, is suspected of changing its employment rules in May 2023 to the disadvantage of its employees who have worked for more than one year and failing to pay their severance pay. Ann's team recently called in some labor ministry officials for questioning about the ministry's handling of Coupang's severance pay case. "The raid on the labor ministry was conducted to confirm various suspicions related to Coupang," said a special coun

Jan 27, 2026By Yonhap
Special prosecutors raid labor ministry over Coupang's unpaid severance pay
South Korea

Customs agency seizes 117,000 counterfeit goods of Korean brands in 2025

Korea's customs agency said Tuesday it has seized a total of 117,000 items of phony goods bearing local brands in its special crackdown conducted last year. Most of such counterfeit goods, or 97.7 percent, were imported from China, while only 2.2 percent were from Vietnam, according to the Korea Customs Service. The items included counterfeited cosmetics products of local brands, key chains of the megahit boy band BTS and fake electronic goods of local companies, such as Samsung Electronics and LG Electronics. The customs agency plans to take follow-up measures to a memorandum of understanding signed with China early this month on the protection of intellectual property at the border level. It also plans to expand cooperation with customs agencies of other countries, while establishing a public-private consultative body with domestic brands to come up with preventive measures.

Jan 27, 2026By Yonhap
Customs agency seizes 117,000 counterfeit goods of Korean brands in 2025
Politics

Why Korea's president is talking about sanitary pad prices

“State-produced sanitary pads” have emerged as a topic of discussion in Korean politics after President Lee Jae Myung repeatedly criticized the high price of menstrual products and ordered officials to explore policies to provide them free of charge. As the government reviews the feasibility of such a plan, some observers have already begun referring to it as a “basic sanitary pad” policy — a nod to Lee’s earlier push for “basic income” during his time as a local government head. Women’s groups, however, caution that affordability cannot come at the expense of safety. According to government officials on Sunday, the Ministry of Gender Equality and Family recently held an internal meeting to discuss policy responses to the high price of sanitary pads. Alongside existing options such as in-kind distribution and voucher support, the ministry is also considering a contract-manufacturing model proposed by Lee. Under this approach, the government would commission the production of sanitary pads that meet a baseline quality standard and distribute them free of charge to designa

Jan 27, 2026By Hankookilbo
Why Korea's president is talking about sanitary pad prices
South Korea

Politicians, gov't officials pay respects to late ex-PM Lee Hae-chan

Politicians and government officials on Tuesday mourned the death of former Prime Minister Lee Hae-chan following his body's return from Vietnam, where he died earlier this week. The casket containing Lee's body arrived at a funeral home at Seoul National University Hospital in central Seoul, hours after its repatriation aboard a Korean Air flight at Incheon International Airport, west of Seoul. Lee, who was serving as executive vice chairperson of the Peaceful Unification Advisory Council (PUAC), died at a hospital in Ho Chi Minh City on Sunday after suffering cardiac arrest. The funeral service will be held for five days through Saturday with government honors but not as a state funeral, reflecting his family's wishes and his contributions to society. Prime Minister Kim Min-seok, who heads Lee's funeral committee, National Assembly Speaker Woo Won-shik and other senior government officials as well as politicians close to Lee were present at the funeral home to receive the casket. A former seven-term lawmaker, Lee served as prime minister during the Roh Moo-hyun administration from 2004

Jan 27, 2026By Yonhap
Politicians, gov't officials pay respects to late ex-PM Lee Hae-chan
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