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  • Defense

    At RIMPAC, Korea’s newest warships signal navy’s growing role

    HONOLULU — “Possible enemy missile launch detected.” The announcement echoed through the combat information center aboard the ROKS Jeongjo the Great and conversations stopped instantly. Sailors fixed their eyes on rows of tactical displays as a simulated missile track appeared on the main screen. Another order came seconds later. “SM-2 interceptor launch in 10 seconds.” The countdown ended. Operators continued working quietly at their consoles while the missile icon closed on its target. A few moments later, another voice broke the silence. “Target disappeared from radar.” The engagement lasted only minutes. It was only a simulation ahead of the sea phase of the Rim of the Pacific Exercise (RIMPAC), but inside the Republic of Korea Navy’s newest Aegis destroyer, there was little to distinguish the drill from combat. The scene aboard Jeongjo the Great captures how far the Korean Navy has come since sending two frigates to its first RIMPAC in 1990. This year, nearly all of the country's newest major naval assets have converged at Joint Base Pearl Harbor-Hickam — the 8,200-ton

    4 MIN READBy Bahk Eun-ji
    At RIMPAC, Korea’s newest warships signal navy’s growing role
  • Global Community

    German chamber of commerce in Korea outlines plans to launch AI startup competition

    2 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    German chamber of commerce in Korea outlines plans to launch AI startup competition
  • South Korea

    Over 700 undocumented foreign delivery riders penalized in crackdown

    2 MIN READBy Lee Kyung-min
    Over 700 undocumented foreign delivery riders penalized in crackdown
  • Society

    Seoul high school athletes to visit Gwangju to apologize for disparaging chants

    2 MIN READBy Yi Whan-woo
    Seoul high school athletes to visit Gwangju to apologize for disparaging chants
  • Law & Crime

    Migrant workers flood new rights hotline after gov't streamlines abuse filing

    2 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    Migrant workers flood new rights hotline after gov't streamlines abuse filing
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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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Politics

Lee reaffirms no extension of capital gains tax exemption for multiple homeowners

President Lee Jae Myung reaffirmed Sunday the government will not extend an exemption of the heavy capital gains tax for owners of multiple homes. In a post on social media platform X, Lee said the tax exemption will expire May 9, as previously decided in February 2025. "If one thought there would be another legal revision to extend it again, that's a miscalculation," he wrote. "The unfair benefits from an abnormality have to be removed at all costs even if it's hard." The temporary tax exemption was introduced in May 2022 as part of efforts to stimulate the real estate market and has been extended annually. Currently, capital gains taxes on real estate sales range from 6 to 45 percent. Owners of two homes in areas designated as speculative zones face an additional 20 percentage points, while those with three homes are subject to a 30 percentage-point surcharge on top of the basic rate. Lee said in his post that he will discuss at a Cabinet meeting whether to grant the exemption for deals made until May 9. He had said in a post Friday that an extension "is not under consideration at all."

Jan 25, 2026By Yonhap
Lee reaffirms no extension of capital gains tax exemption for multiple homeowners
Politics

PM meets Korean leaders, residents in New York

Prime Minister Kim Min-seok has met with Korean leaders and residents in New York to thank them for their contributions to developing South Korea-U.S. relations, his office said Sunday. Kim has been on a five-day trip to Washington and New York, marking his first U.S. trip since taking office in July 2025. On Friday (local time), Kim met with U.S. Vice President JD Vance and proposed the idea of the U.S. sending a special envoy to North Korea to mend ties between Washington and Pyongyang. On Saturday, he held a luncheon meeting with five Korean representatives and local community leaders in New York to share the details of his trip and thank them for serving as a "connecting link" in the development of bilateral relations, his office said in a press release. The five were New York State representatives Ron Kim and Grace Lee, Mayor of Palisades Park Chong Paul Kim, Mayor of Englewood Cliffs Mark Park and President and CEO of The Korea Society Abraham Kim. The prime minister later held a separate meeting with Korean residents in the New York area and praised their efforts in contributing to

Jan 25, 2026By Yonhap
PM meets Korean leaders, residents in New York
Politics

Lee calls achieving self-reliant defense 'most basic of basics' over new US defense strategy

President Lee Jae Myung said Saturday achieving a self-reliant national defense is the "most basic of basics" over a new U.S. defense strategy that calls for South Korea's primary role in its defense. Lee wrote the message on his X account as the Pentagon said in its National Defense Strategy (NDS) that South Korea is capable of taking "primary" responsibility to deter North Korea with "critical, but more limited" U.S. support. "In the midst of an unstable international security situation, achieving self-reliant defense is the most basic of basics," Lee wrote. He said it will be inconceivable for South Korea to be unable to defend itself when its defense spending stands at 1.4 times larger than North Korea's gross domestic product (GDP) and it holds the world's fifth-largest military power. "A robust self-reliant defense and peace on the Korean Peninsula will enable sustainable economic growth," Lee said. The 2026 NDS is in line with U.S. President Donald Trump's America First policy that calls for allies to do more for their own defense. South Korea plans to increase its defense spending

Jan 25, 2026By Yonhap
Lee calls achieving self-reliant defense 'most basic of basics' over new US defense strategy
Morning Calm Tales

MORNING CALM TALES Korea's winter cold clings different

My first winter in Seoul taught me the meaning of warmth — by taking it away. I had grown up with Midwest winters, and thought I knew cold, but this was different — less about endurance than attention. In 1990, my apartment in Jamsil looked solid enough from the outside — concrete, utilitarian, built to last — but inside it held the cold. Not drafty, exactly, just unyielding. The windows were sealed tight, yet the chill lingered in corners and walls, settling quietly overnight. One morning, I went to retrieve my clothes from the laundry room and found ice layered on the walls and windows, my clothes frozen stiff in the unheated space. It startled me — not the cold itself, but how calmly it had arrived while I slept. Then there was ondol. I had heard of it before but didn’t yet understand it — not really. The first night, the floor began to warm, slowly and invisibly, the heat moving beneath me the way it was meant to. I sat on the floor because that was where the heat lived. The chill retreated upward, lifting from my bones in stages. The room stayed cold. The air offered

Jan 25, 2026By Jeffrey Miller
[MORNING CALM TALES] Korea's winter cold clings different
South Korea

Police seek arrest warrants for 73 online scam suspects extradited from Cambodia

Police sought arrest warrants Saturday for all 73 South Korean suspects extradited from Cambodia over alleged involvement in online scam operations, according to officials. The warrants were filed a day after the suspects, who had been detained in Cambodia, were brought home Friday on a chartered flight to face investigation. It marked the nation's largest extradition of criminal suspects from a single country. The suspects are accused of swindling a combined 48.6 billion won ($33.1 million) from 869 South Korean victims. They were immediately placed under custody after boarding the plane with court-issued warrants and transferred to local police agencies nationwide on arrival for further investigation. Among the suspects, 70 of them are accused of participation in online fraud activities, such as romance scams, while the remaining three face charges of robbery by hostage taking, and gambling. One of them is accused of fleeing to Cambodia and engaging in scams after allegedly committing a sexual crime against a minor, while another is suspected of keeping a victim hostage at a criminal co

Jan 24, 2026By Yonhap
Police seek arrest warrants for 73 online scam suspects extradited from Cambodia
Health

Koreans' teeth at risk amid Dubai-style dessert ‘Dujjonku’ craze

Dental experts have warned that sweet and sticky foods such as the viral “Dubai jjondeuk cookie,” or Dujjonku, can be harmful to oral health. According to the medical community Jan. 23, cavities occur when bacteria in the mouth break down sugar in food and release acid, which erodes the surface of teeth. The higher a food’s sugar content, the more acid the bacteria produce, and the stickier the food, the longer residues cling to teeth, increasing the time teeth are exposed to acid. Food debris left on teeth continuously supplies nutrients to cavity-causing bacteria, accelerating tooth decay and contributing to tartar buildup. Lim Hyun-chang, a professor of periodontology at Kyung Hee University Dental Hospital, said some ingredients in the “Dubai jjondeuk cookie” can remain for long periods in narrow gaps between teeth or along the gum line, adding that this can lead to gum inflammation. For those unwilling to give up the popular treat, proper brushing is essential. Brushing is generally recommended within two to three minutes after eating. In particular, after consuming foods

Jan 24, 2026By Hankookilbo
Koreans' teeth at risk amid Dubai-style dessert ‘Dujjonku’ craze
Society

Korea turns to viral cookies, K-pop photo cards to address chronic blood shortage

Choi Sang-hun, a 21-year-old office worker who regularly donates blood, had never tried a Dubai chewy cookie known as “dujjonku,” even as it surges in popularity to become one of the hardest treats to find in Korea. He finally got a taste at the Gwanghwamun Blood Donation Center in Jongno District, central Seoul, where the cookies were handed out to the first 100 people to donate blood that day. “I don’t know yet whether it tastes good because I haven’t tried it, but it feels great to get one,” Choi told The Korea Times. His story points to a broader effort by the Korean Red Cross, which oversees the nation’s blood supply, and has turned to a growing list of incentives — from viral cookies to K-pop — as it struggles to ease a chronic blood shortage. The Korean Red Cross has not met this year's benchmark for adequate daily blood supplies of at least five days’ worth, meaning it remains at the “alert monitoring” stage. The strain of an inadequate supply follows a recent slide in reserves: Blood supplies met the adequate level for 242 days in 2023 and 304 days in 2024

Jan 24, 2026By Park Ung
Korea turns to viral cookies, K-pop photo cards to address chronic blood shortage
South Korea

Presidential aide, DPK lawmakers arrive in Vietnam to support ex-PM Lee in critical condition

A senior presidential aide and ruling party lawmakers arrived in Vietnam on Saturday to support former Prime Minister Lee Hae-chan, who remains in critical condition after suffering a heart attack during a trip to Ho Chi Minh City, officials said. Cho Jung-sik, special adviser to the president for political affairs, headed to a general hospital where Lee is under intensive treatment after arriving in Vietnam on Saturday afternoon. President Lee Jae Myung ordered Cho's dispatch late Friday after receiving a report that the former prime minister's condition had deteriorated severely. Cho is expected to brief the president after reviewing Lee Hae-chan's condition and determine whether additional assistance is required. Lee Hae-chan, currently senior vice chairperson of the Peaceful Unification Advisory Council (PUAC), collapsed during his official trip to Ho Chi Minh City on Friday after experiencing breathing difficulties. He underwent a stent insertion procedure and reportedly remains in critical condition, breathing with the assistance of a mechanical device. He is expected to remain at t

Jan 24, 2026By Yonhap
Presidential aide, DPK lawmakers arrive in Vietnam to support ex-PM Lee in critical condition
Defense

S. Korea capable of taking primary responsibility to deter NK with 'critical, but more limited' US support: Pentagon

WASHINGTON — South Korea is capable of taking "primary" responsibility to deter North Korean threats with "critical, but more limited" U.S. support, a new U.S. defense strategy showed Friday, an assessment in line with President Donald Trump's America First policy that calls for allies to do more for their own defense. In its National Defense Strategy (NDS), the Pentagon also said that the shift "in the balance of responsibility" is consistent with America's interest in updating the U.S. force's posture in Korea, as it seeks to "modernize" the Seoul-Washington alliance to focus more on deterring growing threats from its top strategic rival, China. It made the call for Seoul's primary role for its defense despite the latest NDS characterizing Pyongyang as posing a "direct military threat" to the Asian ally, with the North Korean nuclear forces presenting "clear and present" danger of a nuclear attack on the American homeland. Like the 2022 version, the 2026 NDS did not mention the goal of pursuing North Korea's denuclearization. Released by the White House in December, the National Sec

Jan 24, 2026By Yonhap
S. Korea capable of taking primary responsibility to deter NK with 'critical, but more limited' US support: Pentagon
Law & Crime

Why animal abusers face lenient punishment in Korea

In 2024, a soldier stationed at a military base in Daegu tortured a cat after it soiled his bedding. He strangled the animal with a combat boot lace and swung it by the neck. He then claimed to be “washing” the injured cat, forcing her to ingest water and hand sanitizer before confining it inside a washing machine that was running. His punishment? A 1.5 million won ($1,050) fine. The Daegu District Court cited the defendant's confession, lack of a criminal record, and past volunteer work at a dog shelter as reasons for leniency. This ruling is not an outlier. Despite public outrage, Korea’s judicial system continues to hand down light sentences for animal cruelty, according to legal experts and data analysis. A recent case in Gongju, South Chungcheong Province, shows how far court rulings fall short of justice. A farm owner was sentenced to one year in prison after his negligence allowed a horse to escape, causing a fatal car accident. Investigators revealed that he had also starved eight horses to death. However, the court mitigated the sentence — already near the eight-month leg

Jan 24, 2026By Hankookilbo
Why animal abusers face lenient punishment in Korea
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