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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 ROK 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 Ae

    4 MIN READBy Bahk Eun-ji
    At RIMPAC, Korea’s newest warships signal Navy’s growing role
  • Society

    Paichai baseball team members apologize to Gwangju peers for disparaging chants

    3 MIN READBy Yi Whan-woo
    Paichai baseball team members apologize to Gwangju peers for disparaging chants
  • Politics

    Ruling party leadership race heats up as ex-PM officially enters contest

    2 MIN READBy Park Ji-won
    Ruling party leadership race heats up as ex-PM officially enters contest
  • Education

    Interview‘Children with disabilities have right to swim’

    2 MIN READBy Jung Min-ho
    ‘Children with disabilities have right to swim’
  • Society

    Korea's push to raise retirement age brings fears over youth job market

    4 MIN READBy Park Ung
    Korea's push to raise retirement age brings fears over youth job market
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Law & Crime

Labor ministry vows stern measures against Coupang over alleged violations

The labor ministry on Tuesday vowed to take stern action against U.S. e-commerce giant Coupang Inc. amid allegations the company violated a set of workplace laws. The remark came after the Ministry of Employment and Labor launched a task force to investigate suspected violations of labor and industrial accident laws, which came to the surface following the company's recent data breach that affected 33.7 million users, or about two-thirds of the South Korean population. Specifically, the team plans to investigate reports that the company engaged in the illegal dispatch of workers and operated programs aimed at laying off low-performance workers. The team will also look into allegations that the company pressured the family of a deceased worker, whose death was presumed to be linked to overwork, to sign a settlement on the condition that they would not file for industrial accident compensation. "Concealing industrial accidents and the illegal dispatch of workers are serious crimes that deny workers' basic rights," Labor Minister Kim Young-hoon said, noting the government intends to take ac

Jan 6, 2026By Yonhap
Labor ministry vows stern measures against Coupang over alleged violations
Defense

PHOTO Defense minister visits Combined Forces Command

Defense Minister Ahn Gyu-back, center, poses for a photo with Korean and U.S. service members, including Gen. Xavier Brunson, second from left, commander of the ROK-U.S. Combined Forces Command, during a visit to the command's headquarters in Pyeongtaek, Gyeonggi Province, Tuesday. Courtesy of Ministry of National Defense

Jan 6, 2026By Bahk Eun-ji
[PHOTO] Defense minister visits Combined Forces Command
Society

Mother of late Coupang worker calls for truth behind workplace death

The mother of a late worker at a Coupang logistics center appeared before police Tuesday as a witness amid allegations the e-commerce giant attempted to cover up an industrial accident. The worker, Jang Deok-jun, died of acute myocardial infarction in 2020 after returning home from an overnight shift in 2020, with his death presumed to be linked to overwork. "Our family cannot contain our rage as to why a young man in his 20s was driven to such an unjust death," Jang's mother said, calling for the truth behind his death to be fully uncovered. The National Courier Workers' Union has accused the company of downplaying Jang's death and filed a complaint with the police against Coupang founder Kim Bom-suk last month, claiming that Kim instigated destruction of evidence to cover up the incident.

Jan 6, 2026By Yonhap
Mother of late Coupang worker calls for truth behind workplace death
Politics

Ruling party lawmakers condemn US attack on Venezuela

Lawmakers of the ruling Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) on Tuesday condemned the United States' military strike on Venezuela, calling it a breach of international law and the United Nations charter. The statement, signed by 68 DPK lawmakers, came after Washington carried out a large-scale military strike that captured Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro and his wife. "A regime's poor governance cannot justify military action against a sovereign state," the lawmakers said. "The restoration of Venezuela's democracy must be left for the people of Venezuela to decide, and it must be done in a peaceful and diplomatic manner." They stressed that the U.S. operation constituted a use of force that violates international law and warned that it could set a dangerous precedent for justifying similar military interventions. The lawmakers also called on the international community to step up efforts to work toward a peaceful resolution to the crisis.

Jan 6, 2026By Yonhap
Ruling party lawmakers condemn US attack on Venezuela
Politics

Budget minister nominee meets fiscal management experts amid controversies

Lee Hye-hoon, the nominee for head of the newly established Ministry of Planning and Budget, held a meeting with academics and researchers Tuesday to gather policy recommendations on future fiscal directions, her confirmation hearing preparation team said. The meeting brought together six experts specializing in fiscal management, including Kang Byung-koo, an economics professor at Inha University, who shared their views on fiscal operations and policy challenges. During the meeting, the experts agreed that fiscal policy should play a more proactive role in easing difficulties facing the public amid a period of structural economic transition. In response, Lee assessed that both domestic and external conditions are facing unprecedented challenges. She stressed that it is the time for fiscal policy to actively serve as a catalyst to solidify economic recovery, boost potential growth and ease polarization. "It has been my consistent belief that fiscal policy must faithfully fulfill its role when it is most needed," Lee was quoted as saying. The meeting came as Lee, a former three-term lawmake

Jan 6, 2026By Yonhap
Budget minister nominee meets fiscal management experts amid controversies
Society

Seoul approves Hyundai Motor’s revised headquarters plan

Seoul city officials have approved a redesign of Hyundai Motor’s planned headquarters in the southern part of the capital, reviving a project that had been mired in delays by setting a new 2031 completion target and replacing the original single-tower plan with three separate buildings. Seoul Metropolitan Government announced on Tuesday that negotiations triggered by the company’s request to alter the original plan wrapped up on Dec. 30, clearing procedural hurdles that had kept the Global Business Complex (GBC) project in limbo. The development on the former Korea Electric Power Corporation site near COEX was originally envisioned as a single 105-story “super tall” tower that would house offices, a hotel and cultural facilities. But objections from the military over potential interference with operations, combined with changing market conditions, pushed Hyundai to abandon the plan in favor of slimmer and shorter office towers. The negotiations resulted in an agreement that allows for three buildings on the 79,341 square meter plot, each 49 stories and about 242 meters high, Kim

Jan 6, 2026By Jung Min-ho
Seoul approves Hyundai Motor’s revised headquarters plan
Politics

Defense budget backlog stalls payments for discharged soldiers

Delays in year-end defense budget disbursements have spilled over from government accounts into the lives of individual soldiers, with thousands of recently discharged service members receiving their government-backed, interest-accruing savings deposits later than scheduled. The Ministry of National Defense said payments under a government-backed savings program, which provides enlisted soldiers with a lump sum upon discharge, were delayed by around a week for roughly 15,000 soldiers who completed their service in December. Defense officials attributed the delay to a disruption in the flow of defense funds at the end of the fiscal year. The defense ministry said the required budget was transferred from the finance authorities in two installments, with the final installment arriving close to the Bank of Korea’s year-end settlement deadline, leaving little time to process payments. While the government has framed the issue as a temporary liquidity problem, this explanation has done little to ease the frustration among soldiers and their families. On online community forums, the delay was

Jan 6, 2026By Bahk Eun-ji
Defense budget backlog stalls payments for discharged soldiers
Law & Crime

Police raid special counsel office in martial law probe

Police on Tuesday raided a special counsel office, as part of their investigation into allegations that the Ministry of Justice attempted to secure detention space within correctional facilities following the martial law declaration in December 2024. A special investigation team from the Korean National Police Agency sent investigators to the office of special counsel Cho Eun-suk in southern Seoul in the morning to secure the detention space-related data from documents previously seized by Cho's team during its raid on former Justice Minister Park Sung-jae. Police said the raid was conducted in connection with the probe into Shin Yong-hae, former head of the Korea Correctional Service, who is accused of playing a role in the martial law imposition. Shin is suspected of assessing detention capacity at correctional facilities in the capital area under the direction of Park during martial law. Shin is said to have reported to Park that an additional 3,600 detainees could be accommodated. The special counsel team concluded last month that Shin also asked his subordinates to write a document

Jan 6, 2026By Yonhap
Police raid special counsel office in martial law probe
Environment & Animals

2025 was nation's second hottest year on record

Last year was the nation's second hottest year on record, the weather agency said Tuesday, due to an extended period of hot weather from early summer to autumn. The country recorded an average temperature of 13.7 degrees Celsius last year, 0.8 C lower than in 2024 and the same as in 2023, tying for the second hottest year since 1973, when Korea began actively collecting weather data, according to the Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA). Last year's figure was 1.2 C above the annual average of 12.5 C for the 1991-2020 period. Aside from February and May, the monthly average temperature last year in all other months was above the long-term average. June and October last year saw the hottest monthly average temperature on record. The KMA attributed the extended period of heat last year to the North Pacific High that grew stronger earlier than usual and maintained its strength longer than previous years. The pressure system's presence near the country led to high temperatures as hot and humid air flowed in. The number of days under a nationwide heat wave, or daily highs of 33 C or over,

Jan 6, 2026By Yonhap
2025 was nation's second hottest year on record
Society

Facing labor shortage, gov't enlists more foreign laborers to farm seafood

Faced with a shrinking workforce and a rapidly aging population, the Korean government last week began dramatically expanding its visa program for foreign workers, opening 15 sectors of the country’s struggling aquaculture industry to overseas labor. Aquaculture involves the controlled cultivation of aquatic organisms — such as fish, shellfish, and seaweed — and is often described as the "farming of the sea." It provides a sustainable alternative to traditional wild-capture fishing. The Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries and the Ministry of Justice said Monday that eligibility for foreign aquaculture workers, previously limited to only farming sea cucumbers, was expanded to include laver (edible seaweed), kelp and mussels, among others. About 200 foreign workers can be employed in Korea annually and are required to hold a bachelor’s degree in a fisheries-related field or an associate degree coupled with at least two years of relevant experience, while those without a degree must have a minimum of five years’ experience. Employers must pay wages of at least 80 percent of the previ

Jan 6, 2026By Park Ung
Facing labor shortage, gov't enlists more foreign laborers to farm seafood
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