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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

Nat'l Assembly passes framework bill revisions on AI tech development

SEOUL — The National Assembly on Tuesday passed revisions to a framework bill on the development of artificial intelligence (AI) technology, the science ministry said, in what is set to become the first such bill in the world to take effect early next year. The revised Framework Act on the Development of Artificial Intelligence and the Creation of a Foundation for Trust, passed in a parliamentary plenary session, is set to take effect beginning Jan. 22. The bill paves the legislative ground for establishing AI-related research centers, prioritizing AI products and services for public sector contracts, and supporting new businesses in the area, according to the ministry. The bill also allows for reflecting the feedback of users who may face difficulty in using the technology, such as the disabled and the elderly, in establishing AI policy and providing financial support for people who find it difficult to use AI products and services.

Dec 31, 2025By Yonhap
Nat'l Assembly passes framework bill revisions on AI tech development
South Korea

Lee hopes White House golden key deepens Seoul-Washington ties

SEOUL — President Lee Jae Myung on Tuesday thanked U.S. President Donald Trump for the gift of a golden key to the White House, saying he hopes the symbolic present will help deepen the alliance between Seoul and Washington. Lee shared a photo on his X account of himself looking at the golden key that Trump sent in return for the gifts he received during his visit to South Korea in October. "Could this perhaps be the key to the White House?" Lee wrote in the post, which was written in both Korean and English. "I'm curious if I may use this key to let myself in if you happen to be away from your desk the next time I visit." Trump handed the key to South Korea's ambassador to the U.S., Kang Kyung-wha, after she formally presented her credentials to him at the White House on Dec. 17, according to Lee's chief of staff, Kang Hoon-sik. Photos show the key engraved with the phrase "Key to the White House" and displayed in a wooden case featuring an image of the presidential residence. Lee said he wants to further enhance the alliance with the U.S. based on the trust and friendship he shares wi

Dec 31, 2025By Yonhap
Lee hopes White House golden key deepens Seoul-Washington ties
Society

Gov't eases access to Yongsan park for visitors, seeks name change

The land ministry said Tuesday it has eased access to a park near the former presidential office in Yongsan, removing a reservation process for security verification purposes. The move comes after the presidential office, previously located near the defense ministry compound, completed its relocation to Cheong Wa Dae in central Seoul, easing security measures in the surrounding area. Previously, visitors to Yongsan Children's Garden had to submit their information in advance, raising criticism that the policy prevents people from freely visiting the park. Alongside the updated entry policy, the ministry said it plans to operate the park in a more efficient and transparent manner, and seek to change its name after accepting public feedback. As part of efforts to better manage the park, the ministry said it plans to conduct regular monitoring of air and soil quality, and disclose the results to the public. The part in front of the former presidential office occupies around 300,000 square meters of land previously used as a base by U.S. forces stationed in Korea. It was named Yongsan Children

Dec 30, 2025By Yonhap
Gov't eases access to Yongsan park for visitors, seeks name change
Politics

Spy agency requests Nat'l Assembly to charge Coupang chief over alleged perjury

The National Intelligence Service (NIS) on Tuesday dismissed the interim chief of Coupang Corp.'s claim that the company conducted an internal probe into a massive data leak upon its order and requested the National Assembly to file a complaint against the executive over alleged perjury. The move came after Harold Rogers, interim CEO of Coupang, claimed in a parliamentary hearing that the online retailer investigated the incident in accordance with the NIS' order and that the spy agency also instructed the company to get in touch with the person who leaked user information. "(The NIS) has requested the National Assembly, which has the right to file a complaint, to take such action ... against the Coupang chief executive on charges of perjury," the NIS said in a press release. The spy agency said the executive's remarks on the NIS giving orders to Coupang is "groundless," saying it has not given any instruction, order or approval to Coupang, with the exception of requesting information, nor is it in the position of taking such action. On the Coupang executive's remarks that the NIS ordere

Dec 30, 2025By Yonhap
Spy agency requests Nat'l Assembly to charge Coupang chief over alleged perjury
Politics

Lee approves resignation of anti-corruption agency chief

President Lee Jae Myung accepted Tuesday the resignation of the head of the Anti-Corruption and Civil Rights Commission (ACRC), Cheong Wa Dae said, ending his three-year term a year early. Ryu Chul-whan, who was appointed by former President Yoon Suk Yeol in January 2024, has submitted his resignation, amid growing pressure from the ruling camp for him to step down. He had faced mounting criticism over the commission's handling of a high-profile case involving former first lady Kim Keon Hee, who was accused of accepting a luxury Dior handbag from a pastor. In June 2024, the ACRC cleared her of the allegations, saying the anti-graft law does not apply to spouses and that the gift was not linked to then President Yoon's official duties. The decision drew heavy public backlash, and one senior ACRC official who led the probe later took his own life after the case was closed. Ryu, who holds ministerial rank, has not attended weekly Cabinet meetings since Dec. 9, fueling speculation that he was quietly under pressure to resign. An alumnus of Seoul National University's law school along with Yoon

Dec 30, 2025By Yonhap
Lee approves resignation of anti-corruption agency chief
Society

China delists 15 Korean universities from recognized overseas institutions

China has removed 15 Korean universities from its list of recognized overseas higher education institutions, raising fresh concerns in Korea’s academic community, where Chinese students make up one of the largest shares of foreign students in the country. The Chinese Service Center for Scholarly Exchange (CSCSE), a body under China’s Ministry of Education that certifies foreign degrees for use in the domestic job market and civil service recruitment, updated its list of accredited overseas institutions in late October, striking 270 schools worldwide, including 15 from Korea. Among the Korean institutions removed are Korea National Open University, Gangneung-Wonju National University, Mokpo National University and Chungbuk Provincial University, according to sources in the local education sector. A number of the delisted schools are regional universities struggling with financial pressure and demographic decline, but the latest update also affected national universities. The removal means these universities are effectively shut out of the Chinese student market. The CSCSE will no lon

Dec 30, 2025By Lee Hae-rin
China delists 15 Korean universities from recognized overseas institutions
Others

Former PM Kim Hwang-sik defends Syngman Rhee at Far East Forum

Former Prime Minister Kim Hwang-sik, who served from 2010 to 2013, said that blaming Syngman Rhee, Korea’s first president, for the division of the Korean Peninsula amounts to "historical distortion." “It was already the case that a communist regime had been established in the North before the formation of a separate government in South Korea. If this had been left unchecked, there was a high possibility that the entire Korean Peninsula would have become communist,” Kim said Monday at the 56th Far East Forum held in Seoul. The forum was organized by the Far East Broadcasting Company (FEBC)-Korea. Views on Rhee’s legacy remain deeply divided in Korea. Critics argue that Rhee failed to pursue reunification as the country’s leader, while his defenders contended that without Rhee, the entire peninsula could have fallen under communist rule. Born in 1875, Rhee spent his young adult life in the United States and contributed to Korea's independence fight against Japan's 1910-45 colonial occupation. After liberation, he was elected Korea’s first president in 1948, and remained in of

Dec 30, 2025By Kim Se-jeong
Former PM Kim Hwang-sik defends Syngman Rhee at Far East Forum
Society

PHOTO Bidding farewell to 2025, preparing for 2026

A maintenance engineer checks the engine of a Boeing 777-200 aircraft at Asiana Airlines' second hangar at Incheon International Airport, Dec. 18, to prepare for operation in the new year. After various accidents and fires in 2025, citizens hope for safety and security in the coming year. Korea Times photo by Choi Won-suk

Dec 30, 2025By Bahk Eun-ji
[PHOTO] Bidding farewell to 2025, preparing for 2026
Policy & Trends

Foreign graduate employment tops 30% for first time

The employment rate of foreign graduates in Korea topped 30 percent for the first time, according to the Ministry of Education Tuesday, in contrast to a decline in Korean graduate employment statistics. An analysis released by the ministry and the Korean Educational Development Institute showed that 36,271 international students completed undergraduate and graduate programs in Korea between August 2023 and February 2024. Of those, 42.9 percent, or 15,576 individuals, ended their stay in Korea. Of those who remained, 4,993 of the 14,966 international graduates eligible for employment, or 33.4 percent, landed jobs locally as of Dec. 31 last year. This represents an increase of 11.7 percentage points from the previous year, when 3,607 foreign graduates secured jobs. The figures are the first accurate statistics of foreign graduate employment based on cross-ministry data sharing introduced last year, the ministry said. Until 2022, such data was compiled solely through the Basic Higher Education Statistics, relying on email and phone surveys to determine employment status. However, authoritie

Dec 30, 2025By Jung Da-hyun
Foreign graduate employment tops 30% for first time
Society

Family of late Vietnamese graduate demands gov’t apology over fatal immigration raid

Two months after a young Vietnamese woman fell to her death during a government immigration raid, her grieving father on Tuesday continued a relay of 108 bows in front of the presidential office in Seoul, demanding an official apology and the suspension of what advocates call "human-hunting" crackdowns on migrant workers. The father of the late Tu Anh, 25, knelt before the fountain square near Cheong Wa Dae for a second consecutive day, joined by human rights activists urging the government to take responsibility for her death. "I regret not stopping my daughter when she decided to study in Korea," said Vu Van Sung. "Her mother still trembles every evening around 6:30 — the time she died. It feels like her soul is still wandering, and we cannot find peace." According to the Daegu-Gyeongbuk Committee for Justice for Tu Anh and the Network to Eliminate Discrimination against Migrant Workers, Tu Anh fell from a third-floor factory building in Daegu’s Seongseo Industrial Complex on Oct. 28 at around 6:30 p.m. while trying to avoid an immigration enforcement team. She was pronounced dead

Dec 30, 2025By Lee Hae-rin
Family of late Vietnamese graduate demands gov’t apology over fatal immigration raid
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