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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
  • Politics

    PM says revised act will minimize negative effects of false information

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    PM says revised act will minimize negative effects of false information
  • Law & Crime

    Prosecutors raid Gwangju police station over leak of murder case details

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Prosecutors raid Gwangju police station over leak of murder case details
  • Education

    Jeonbuk National University partners with SK AX to become leading AI hub university

    2 MIN READBy Park Yoon-bae
    Jeonbuk National University partners with SK AX to become leading AI hub university
  • Environment & Animals

    Korea turns to plant extracts to combat urban 'lovebug' swarms

    2 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    Korea turns to plant extracts to combat urban 'lovebug' swarms
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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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South Korea

INTERVIEW Sign language steps into spotlight at Cheong Wa Dae

As Korea’s presidential office returned to its historic home at Cheong Wa Dae in central Seoul in December, the presidential press briefing room has undergone one meaningful change. Park Ji-yeon, the presidential office’s official sign language interpreter, now stands directly beside the speaker as statements are delivered. Previously, her sign language interpretation was conducted from a separate location and shown in a small overlay on the broadcast footage. Park joined the presidential office as an in-house sign language interpreter in August. Park, who has 27 years of experience as a sign language interpreter, worked for 18 years at the National Assembly and National Assembly Television before being appointed exclusive sign language interpreter under the Lee Jae Myung administration. It was then that the presidential office began offering sign language interpretation at official briefings, marking the first time in Korea’s history that a presidential administration has done so regularly. While the move was intended as a symbolic and practical step toward greater inclusivity and

Dec 31, 2025By Anna J. Park
[INTERVIEW] Sign language steps into spotlight at Cheong Wa Dae
  • Presidential office introduces sign language interpretation for press briefings
Law & Crime

Police open probe into ruling party lawmaker over alleged bribe-taking

Police have begun investigating Rep. Kang Sun-woo of the ruling Democratic Party of Korea (DPK) over allegations of receiving 100 million won ($69,400) from a Seoul city councilor, officials said Wednesday. The Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency's public crime investigation team has been assigned to the case after opposition lawmakers filed a complaint against Kang and the council member on bribery charges. Kang has been accused of receiving the money via an aide during the regional elections in 2022. The case recently received attention after Kang was found to have discussed the matter with Rep. Kim Byung-kee of the same party, who is currently embroiled in allegations of misconduct. Separately, police plan to question an activist later in the day who alleged that Rep. Kim met Park Dae-jun, then CEO of Coupang Corp., in September to influence personnel decisions surrounding his former aide who was hired by the company. The lawmaker resigned from the ruling party's floor leadership Tuesday amid mounting allegations of misconduct, which included receiving preferential treatment and abusing h

Dec 31, 2025By Yonhap
Police open probe into ruling party lawmaker over alleged bribe-taking
Defense

Korean military to offer drone operation training to all conscripts next year

Korea's military will offer all conscripts drone operation training starting next year in its bid to strengthen combat capabilities in modern warfare, the defense ministry said Wednesday. Under the plan, dubbed the "500,000 drone warrior" project, the ministry will allocate some 33 billion won ($22.9 million) next year to acquire around 11,000 small commercial drones required for training. The plan comes as part of the military's efforts to enhance combat skills using drones, which have become increasingly effective, low-cost combat equipment in modern warfare. Defense Minister Ahn Gyu-back earlier proposed the plan in September, saying nurturing 500,000 drone warriors will not only strengthen the military's drone operation capabilities but also serve as the "foundation" for troops to work in relevant industries after their service.

Dec 31, 2025By Yonhap
Korean military to offer drone operation training to all conscripts next year
Politics

Nat'l Assembly set to file complaint against head of Coupang's Korean unit over alleged perjury

The National Assembly is set to make a decision on Wednesday that would file a complaint against the interim chief of Coupang's Korean unit over alleged perjury amid a parliamentary hearing into the online retailer's massive data leak that affected nearly two-thirds of Korea's population. The move comes a day after Harold Rogers, interim CEO of Coupang, the online retailer's Korean unit, claimed that the company conducted an internal probe into the massive data leak at the direction of the National Intelligence Service (NIS) and that the spy agency instructed the company to get in touch with the person who leaked user information. The NIS denied giving such instructions, saying it has asked the Assembly to seek a complaint against Rogers for alleged perjury. The decision on whether to move forward with the complaint will be made later in the day during the hearing, which will examine the company's handling of personal data leaks, as well as alleged unfair practices. The government reaffirmed Tuesday that the major data breach at the U.S.-listed e-commerce giant affected 33 million custom

Dec 31, 2025By Yonhap
Nat'l Assembly set to file complaint against head of Coupang's Korean unit over alleged perjury
Law & Crime

Top court upholds acquittal of activist who sent letter praising late N. Korean leader

The Supreme Court has confirmed an acquittal of the head of an inter-Korean exchange group who sent a letter praising late North Korean leader Kim Jong-il and a condolence wreath over his death more than a decade ago, officials said Wednesday. On Dec. 4, the top court upheld a lower court ruling that found Kim Kyung-sung, chief of the Inter-Korean Sports Exchange Association, not guilty of violating the National Security Act, which prohibits praising an anti-state organization or its members. Kim was earlier indicted on charges of handing the letter to a North Korean official in February 2010 in time for the then North Korean leader's birthday and sending the wreath to the North Korean Embassy in China after his death in December 2011. While Kim was initially found guilty of violating the law, an appellate court later struck down the ruling, saying it was not clearly proven whether the defendant's actions posed "clear danger" to the state or the liberal democratic order. The court, however, fined him 10 million won ($6,950) on separate charges of embezzling donations in 2013, sending foo

Dec 31, 2025By Yonhap
Top court upholds acquittal of activist who sent letter praising late N. Korean leader
Society

Will Hongdae’s busking zone survive Seoul’s new rail plan?

In almost any Korean neighborhood, news of a new subway station is greeted with celebration. In western Seoul's Hongdae area, however, a recent announcement has sparked rare rebellion. Merchants and buskers on Red Road, a landmark pedestrian strip at the heart of the neighborhood’s youth culture, are leading an unusually fierce campaign against the planned construction of the Daejang-Hongdae Line terminus there, even as commuters, nearby residents and property owners along the route hail the project as a long-awaited upgrade to western Seoul’s rail network. The Daejang-Hongdae Line is a roughly 20-kilometer metro project that will link Bucheon's Daejang-dong and Goyang's Deogeun-dong, both in Gyeonggi Province, with key hubs in Seoul’s Yangcheon and Gangseo areas, cross Gayang Bridge and reach Mapo District’s Hongdae area. Twelve stations are planned. The line, backed by the Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport and built by a private consortium with a 2.1 trillion won budget, is promoted as a "transportation revolution" for southwestern Gyeonggi Province and western Se

Dec 31, 2025By Lee Hae-rin
Will Hongdae’s busking zone survive Seoul’s new rail plan?
Morning Calm Tales

MORNING CALM TALES New Year’s Eve in the DMZ

Whether you’re a long-term expat or a first-time visitor to Korea, sooner or later someone will say, “You should really see the DMZ.” It’s spoken the way people recommend a temple stay or a hike up Mount Bukhan — half tourism suggestion, half rite of passage. Bill Clinton famously called the demilitarized zone separating the two Koreas “the scariest place on Earth” during a visit in 1993. That alone is usually enough to seal the deal. I had been in Korea a little over six years when a buddy and I finally decided to see for ourselves just how scary the scariest place on Earth actually was. We signed up for a tour operated by the United Service Organizations (USO), the most straightforward and cheapest way back then. Along with a busload of other curious souls — military personnel, dependents and a handful of wide-eyed tourists — we headed north on New Year’s Eve, 1996. I hadn’t given much thought to the date when we made our reservations. New Year’s Eve in the DMZ. It sounded less like a sightseeing excursion and more like the opening chapter of a Cold War thriller.

Dec 31, 2025By Jeffrey Miller
[MORNING CALM TALES] New Year’s Eve in the DMZ
Global Community

Ring in the New Year with great intentions

"New year, new me" is a sentiment many of us recognize. It is often spoken with optimism, believed briefly and then followed by abandoned resolutions and disappointment. While this cycle can feel like harmless tradition, repeated failed attempts at change can quietly erode our confidence and belief in ourselves. As a psychologist, I am not immune to the appeal of New Year reflections. I value these moments of pause and intention-setting. But through both my professional work and personal experience, I have learned that lasting change rarely comes from aiming too high or demanding perfection. When we repeatedly fall short of unrealistic goals, we risk reinforcing negative beliefs about our ability to change at all. With that in mind, there are a few principles that can help protect against this cycle and support more sustainable change. Find the why We often focus on what we want to change and how we will do it, but sustainable change is grounded in understanding why it matters. When intentions are linked to our values and deeper needs, they feel more authentic and easier to maintain ove

Dec 31, 2025By Dr. Jill Dunbar
Ring in the New Year with great intentions
South Korea

Lee Sang-min’s journey earns him SBS top honor, 'Running Man' wins again

Lee Sang-min took home the top honor at the 2025 SBS Entertainment Awards on Tuesday, with the ceremony highlighting his return after years of personal hardship while also celebrating an industry veteran and introducing a new AI-based award. Lee’s win resonated with viewers familiar with his long-publicized struggles, many of which have unfolded on SBS variety programs over the years. Beating out heavyweights such as Yoo Jae-suk and Jun Hyun-moo, Lee’s personal journey emerged as a defining storyline of the awards night. Lee has appeared on SBS’s long-running variety show “My Little Old Boy” since 2017, where his frugal lifestyle and candid portrayal of financial difficulties earned him the nickname “Gungsang-min,” a play on his name meaning someone who lives in extreme thrift. He also spent four years and five months on “Dolsing Fourmen,” a talk-variety program that recently ended its run. Accepting the grand prize, Lee became emotional as he reflected on how openly his life has been documented on television. “I never imagined that just showing how hard I struggle t

Dec 31, 2025By Jane Han
Lee Sang-min’s journey earns him SBS top honor, 'Running Man' wins again
South Korea

Seo Kang-joon wins MBC Drama Awards as ceremony honors Lee Soon-jae

Actor Seo Kang-joon took home the top honor at the 2025 MBC Drama Awards, capping a night that also paid tribute to late veteran actor Lee Soon-jae and offered a first look at an upcoming high-profile series. The ceremony, hosted by announcer Kim Sung-joo and actress Lee Sun-bin, was held Tuesday at MBC’s public hall in Sangam-dong, western Seoul. Seo received the grand prize and said he was taken aback by the weight of the honor. “I feel overwhelmed receiving such a heavy award,” Seo said, adding that the recognition came at a particularly meaningful moment in his career. Seo starred in “Undercover High School,” his first drama project since completing mandatory military service. Reflecting on the experience, he said returning to a drama set had been deeply moving. “I missed the set so much,” he said. “When I look around, there are so many people who work harder and are more accomplished than I am. I often think about how easily I could be replaced.” He added that he hopes to continue growing as an actor. “Until the day my acting career ends, I don’t want to be repl

Dec 31, 2025By Jane Han
Seo Kang-joon wins MBC Drama Awards as ceremony honors Lee Soon-jae
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