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  • Society

    One doctor, one NICU, 100-hour workweeks: Korea's neonatal care crisis

    "If a phone call comes in 24 hours a day, I run to the hospital," said Lee Byung-guk, a pediatrics professor at Sejong Chungnam National University Hospital. "I cannot sleep properly, so my greatest fear is making a bad judgment at a critical moment." Lee made the appeal on Sunday. He has overseen the hospital's neonatal intensive care unit, or NICU, with a sense of mission since July 2020. The job consumes his daily life. Whenever emergency deliveries are scheduled or an extremely premature baby’s condition deteriorates, he must rush back to the hospital, remaining on call 24 hours a day. Although the hospital employs contract physicians on duty, caring for high-risk newborns remains solely the responsibility of Lee, who is a specialist. "Even though there are contract physicians on duty, if a baby is born before 32 weeks of pregnancy, I have no choice but to return to the hospital," Lee said. He added that he once received an emergency call during a medical school lecture and had to be speeding back to the facility. Driven by a growing sense of crisis in the medical field, the Korean

    3 MIN READBy Hankookilbo
    One doctor, one NICU, 100-hour workweeks: Korea's neonatal care crisis
  • 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
  • Defense

    Germany’s TKMS beats Hanwha Ocean for Canada submarine deal: Canadian media

    1 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    Germany’s TKMS beats Hanwha Ocean for Canada submarine deal: Canadian media
  • Law & Crime

    Sentences finalized for 3 people in ex-first lady's corruption case

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Sentences finalized for 3 people in ex-first lady's corruption case
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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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Global Community

Shoegaze festival Delay Relay returns for second year

Korea's indie music scene has a long history of shoegaze, a subgenre of rock music that fuses dense layers of distorted and heavily reverbed guitars with melancholic, wispy vocals. However, that interest has exploded in recent years, with shoegaze becoming the defining sound of Korean indie. Delay Relay, Korea’s first festival dedicated to shoegaze and shoegaze-adjacent sounds, now returns for its second installment. Taking place at a variety of Seoul music venues between Jan. 10 and Feb. 7, Delay Relay will feature some of Korea’s most loved shoegaze artists. James, the founder of Delay Relay Festival, speaks with unmistakable passion about Seoul's underground music scene. Known to some as Hippytokki James, after the Hongdae venue he used to run, he's become a central figure in Korea's shoegaze community. Despite his fine art education, life took him down a different path. "I studied painting, but somehow am doing music-related stuff," he told The Korea Times. "Life is quirky that way." That surprising direction has manifested itself in Delay Relay. The festival was born from necessi

Jan 5, 2026By Jamie Finn
Shoegaze festival Delay Relay returns for second year
Global Community

Jim Lee, Bob Layton and Korea's expanding American comics scene

What began as a routine weekday gathering for graphic artists of all levels quickly became more significant as Jim Lee, the Korean American president, publisher and chief creative officer of DC Comics, visited Korea’s only dedicated American comic book store. The visit on Jan. 1 coincided with Dice & Comics Café's (DCC) weekly “Drink & Draw” event, a recurring Thursday gathering where creators sketch and share ideas together over drinks. This time, the theme was Lee’s work, and attendees filled sketchbooks with images inspired by Lee’s style, engaging actively with his visual language. Lee, whose career spans decades and continents, said that while Japan’s manga industry is something he's more familiar with, Korea had remained largely unexplored territory. He noted that while DC distributes translated comics in Korea, he had not realized there was a dedicated audience actively purchasing both translated and original English versions. Lee reflected on the global reach of comics, noting that while American comics have long enjoyed strong followings in Europe and South America

Jan 5, 2026By Agrim Bhalla
Jim Lee, Bob Layton and Korea's expanding American comics scene
Health

Majority of Korean workers flagged for health risks, new data shows

Nearly 6 in 10 Korean workers who underwent mandatory workplace health screenings in 2024 were found to have abnormal results, government data showed Sunday, raising concerns about worsening health conditions among employees exposed to hazardous work environments. According to a report by the Ministry of Employment and Labor, 1.62 million workers — or 58.7 percent of the 2.75 million examined — were classified as having abnormal findings. The figure rose by about 90,800 workers, or 5.9 percent, from a year earlier, outpacing the 3.1 percent increase in the total number of examinees. Unlike routine health screenings for the general population, the examinations are mandatory for workers exposed to hazardous or dangerous conditions, including those in manufacturing and construction, employees exposed to high noise levels at power plants and airports, nurses, and commercial drivers such as truck, bus and taxi operators. The data showed a sharp rise in workers with clear signs of disease, a category indicating a high likelihood of illness requiring further testing or treatment. In 2024,

Jan 4, 2026By Kim Hyun-bin
Majority of Korean workers flagged for health risks, new data shows
Education

Private education spending surges over 60% despite shrinking student population

Even as Korea’s student population has shrunk because of the country’s low birthrate, spending on after-school tutoring and test preparation academies has risen by more than 60 percent over the past decade. The increase has been driven largely by a surge in private tutoring among elementary school students, as demand shifts to increasingly younger ages. According to data released Sunday by the Korea Statistical Information Service (KOSIS), household spending on private tutoring academies reached 29.19 trillion won ($20.18 billion), marking a 60.1 percent increase from 2014. After declining through 2015, when spending fell to 17.83 trillion won, expenditures on after-school tutoring and test preparation centers began rising again in 2016 and surpassed 20 trillion won in 2019. Spending dipped temporarily to 19.35 trillion won in 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic, but has increased for four consecutive years since 2021. While the number of students is declining, overall spending on private tutoring has continued to rise, influenced by a range of social and economic factors. KOSIS attribut

Jan 4, 2026By Jung Da-hyun
Private education spending surges over 60% despite shrinking student population
Society

Over 20% of Koreans 65 and older in 2025: data

A little over 1 in every 5 Koreans was 65 or older in 2025, data showed Sunday, as the country moved deeper into the "super-aged society" category. According to the Ministry of the Interior and Safety, some 10.84 million people were aged 65 and older in 2025, accounting for 21.21 percent of the entire population of about 51.11 million. Based on the United Nations' demographic classification, a country where over 20 percent of the population is aged 65 and older is defined as super-aged. Korea became one in 2024. Of the entire female population, 23.39 percent were 65 and older, compared with 19 percent for the male population in that age group. By region, the 65-and-over group accounted for 18.82 percent of the population in the capital area, while the figure was 23.69 percent in the rest of the country. The ministry said the seniors had over a 20 percent share of the population in 11 provinces and cities, including Seoul for the first time. The ministry's data also showed that the number of single-person households went up by about 1.5 percent from a year earlier to 10.27 million in 2025

Jan 4, 2026By Yonhap
Over 20% of Koreans 65 and older in 2025: data
South Korea

Cheong Wa Dae urges N. Korea to cease provocations following missile launch

The Office of National Security at the presidential office of Cheong Wa Dae held an emergency meeting Sunday after North Korea fired multiple ballistic missiles into the East Sea and urged Pyongyang to cease provocations. The meeting was convened by Deputy National Security Adviser Lim Jong-deuk and attended by officials from the defense ministry and the Joint Chiefs of Staff (JCS) to analyze and assess the North's latest missile launch and review South Korea's military readiness, according to Cheong Wa Dae. "North Korea's launch of ballistic missiles constitutes a provocative act in violation of United Nations Security Council resolutions, and we urge the North to cease such actions," the national security office said in a release. The South Korean military said it detected the launches from an area near Pyongyang at around 7:50 a.m. The North Korean missiles flew some 900 kilometers, the JCS said, noting the South Korean and U.S. authorities were analyzing the exact details of the launch. It was the North's first weapons test this year, following its last ballistic missile launch in Nov

Jan 4, 2026By Yonhap
Cheong Wa Dae urges N. Korea to cease provocations following missile launch
Law & Crime

Intruder counter-suing Nana claims he ‘never laid a finger on her’ as prison letter fuels backlash

A man who broke into the home of Korean singer-actress Nana and was jailed on robbery charges has now filed a counter-complaint against her — and his handwritten prison letter, released through local TV, is stirring anger among Korean social media users. According to JTBC news program “Crime Chief,” the intruder, identified only as A, sent five letters from detention through an acquaintance, insisting that he did not attack Nana or her mother and that he was instead stabbed during the struggle. He wrote that he had entered the home only for theft, saying he wore gloves and a headset but “did not prepare a weapon in advance,” and that he only grabbed Nana’s mother tightly to stop her from moving rather than engaging in a violent fight. He further claimed that Nana attempted to stab him with a household object. “I was pierced about 7 centimeters between my ear and neck, but I never touched any part of Nana’s body — not even a single hair.” He also alleged that he broke into the home because he needed money for his mother’s hospital bills, and that after being subdue

Jan 4, 2026By Xportsnews
Intruder counter-suing Nana claims he ‘never laid a finger on her’ as prison letter fuels backlash
South Korea

Lee orders protection of S. Korean nat'ls in Venezuela, preparation of evacuation plans if necessary

President Lee Jae Myung instructed officials Saturday to ensure the protection of South Korean nationals in Venezuela and to prepare evacuation plans if necessary, his office said. Lee's instruction came on the heels of a U.S. military strike against the South American country, confirmed by U.S. President Donald Trump, amid his administration's pressure campaign on Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro. "President Lee Jae Myung instructed officials to ensure the thorough protection of South Korean nationals in Venezuela and to meticulously prepare evacuation plans so they can be swiftly carried out if necessary," a Cheong Wa Dae spokesperson said in a message to media. Trump announced the United States had carried out a large-scale military strike against Venezuela and captured Maduro, who has been charged with narco-terrorism in the U.S.

Jan 3, 2026By Yonhap
Lee orders protection of S. Korean nat'ls in Venezuela, preparation of evacuation plans if necessary
South Korea

Budget minister pick faces growing pressure to step down as more allegations surface

Lee Hye-hoon, the nominee to head the newly established Ministry of Planning and Budget, came under intensifying political pressure Saturday to step down as suspicions of her husband's past real estate speculation emerged following revelations of her mistreating an intern while serving as a lawmaker. Lee, a former three-term lawmaker from the conservative bloc, has drawn criticism from both the ruling and opposition parties since her surprise nomination by President Lee Jae Myung on Sunday. Some members of the ruling Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) have voiced discomfort over the economist-turned-politician's past remarks supporting former President Yoon Suk Yeol's failed martial law bid, while the main opposition People Power Party (PPP) has branded her a traitor. The PPP has stepped up its offensive ahead of Lee's confirmation hearing, citing recently disclosed audio recordings of Lee abusively reprimanding an intern during her time in the National Assembly. On Saturday, PPP Rep. Joo Jin-woo also claimed that Lee's husband engaged in real estate speculation by purchasing large tracts o

Jan 3, 2026By Yonhap
Budget minister pick faces growing pressure to step down as more allegations surface
South Korea

Han River freezes early this winter amid continued cold wave

The Han River in Seoul was declared frozen Saturday by weather authorities for the first time this winter as a cold snap has continued for days. The first freezing of the river for this winter season was observed on the river running through the capital city seven days earlier than in previous years, according to the Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA). According to the KMA, the river is officially declared frozen when it has thick ice in a 100-meter-long area between the Han River Bridge's second and fourth piers. The bridge links Seoul's Yongsan Ward and Dongjak Ward. In previous winters, the first freeze on the river was declared around Jan. 10. Last winter, the Han River was first recorded frozen Feb. 9.

Jan 3, 2026By Yonhap
Han River freezes early this winter amid continued cold wave
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