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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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Politics

Nat'l Assembly approves confirmation motion for state audit chief nominee

The National Assembly on Tuesday approved a confirmation motion for a nominee to head the state audit agency, making the appointment official. Parliament convened a plenary session and voted in favor of appointing Kim Ho-cheol, a human rights lawyer, as chair of the Board of Audit and Inspection (BAI), a day after holding a confirmation hearing as required by law. Lawmakers voted 212 for and 34 against with five abstentions. Kim was nominated by President Lee Jae Myung for the BAI chair post earlier this month. His nomination was subject to parliamentary approval. A BAI chief serves a four-year term and may be reappointed for another single term. During the confirmation hearing Monday, Kim said he would consider revamping BAI's internal oversight units to bolster the agency's self-policing functions and restore public trust. The BAI has been at the center of a political controversy in recent years, with critics claiming the institution had been used for politically motivated audits under previous administrations. Kim vowed to fend off undue external interference and pressure to ensure the a

Dec 30, 2025By Yonhap
Nat'l Assembly approves confirmation motion for state audit chief nominee
Society

Tripartite declaration sets goal to reduce Korea’s working hours to OECD average

Labor, business and government representatives have agreed on a landmark plan to reduce Korea’s annual working hours to about the OECD average by 2030, casting shorter hours as a national strategy for sustainable growth and tackling the low birthrate. At a public briefing held Tuesday on the “Road Map Task Force for Reducing Actual Working Hours,” representatives announced a joint declaration and policy blueprint committing all three sides to bringing the country’s average annual working hours down to about 1,700 hours, roughly in line with the average for members of the OECD, a group of mostly advanced economies. This marks the first time the three sides have formally defined reducing working time as a joint mission, presenting it as a necessary step toward achieving “work-life balance.” Labor Minister Kim Young-hoon and senior representatives of labor and business all pledged to shift the country away from its long-hours work culture toward “qualitative labor,” where efficiency and fair rewards replace reliance on overtime. “Labor, management and government share the

Dec 30, 2025By Jung Min-ho
Tripartite declaration sets goal to reduce Korea’s working hours to OECD average
Defense

Defense ministry to create deputy minister post overseeing AI policy

The defense ministry will create the post of deputy minister in charge of artificial intelligence (AI)-related affairs this week in an effort to better build a smart military, officials said Tuesday. The reform plan, which was approved at a Cabinet meeting earlier in the day, is aimed at transforming the military into a force that adopts cutting-edge technologies, the ministry said. Under the plan, the ministry will abolish the office of military resource management and establish a new deputy minister in charge of all AI-related functions, including logistics, information and military assets. Won Jong-dae, head of the office of military resource management, will take on the role as the new deputy minister, according to ministry officials. The deputy minister will oversee four bureaus concerned with AI tasks, comprising around 220 personnel. The post of deputy defense minister will be revived for the first time since 2006. The organizational overhaul is set to take effect Friday.

Dec 30, 2025By Yonhap
Defense ministry to create deputy minister post overseeing AI policy
Society

1 in 20 Koreans shows low social interaction

One in 20 Koreans has limited social interaction with others, a government analysis shows, offering a rare data-based look at how weaker personal networks are reflected in work, mobility and spending patterns. The Ministry of Data and Statistics released a report Monday on living conditions among four groups of social and policy interest: older adults ages 65 and older, young adults ages 19 to 34, the low-interaction group and people 18 and older with no loan or credit card history over the past three years. The low-interaction group was defined as mobile phone users who contacted fewer than 20 distinct people and made fewer than 500 outgoing calls and text messages a month. This placed them in the bottom 15 percent for the former and the bottom 10 percent for the latter as of the first quarter of this year. The ministry combined the government’s 2023 population data with first-quarter data this year on daily activity from SK Telecom, Shinhan Card, Korea Credit Bureau and SK Broadband to analyze economic and social activity. It said the report is the first such analysis to closely exam

Dec 30, 2025By Park Ung
1 in 20 Koreans shows low social interaction
Defense

Hanwha Aerospace signs $4 bil. Chunmoo missile contract with Poland

Hanwha Aerospace has signed an execution contract worth about 5.6 trillion won ($4 billion) to supply Chunmoo guided missiles to Poland, according to the company and government officials. The contract was signed on Monday (local time) at the Polish Army Museum in Warsaw with the Polish Armament Agency. It covers the supply of CGR-080 guided missiles with a maximum range of 80 kilometers and will be carried out through Hanwha-WB Advanced System, a joint venture established by Hanwha Aerospace and Poland’s WB Group. The missiles will be produced at a dedicated facility in Poland, with deliveries scheduled to begin in 2030. This is the third execution contract Poland has signed for the Chunmoo multiple rocket launcher system. Hanwha Aerospace concluded a framework agreement with Poland in 2022 and later that year signed its first execution contract, valued at about 5 trillion won. A second execution contract worth roughly 2 trillion won followed in April 2024. With the latest agreement, the total value of Chunmoo-related contracts with Poland has reached about 12.6 trillion won. Speaking

Dec 30, 2025By Bahk Eun-ji
Hanwha Aerospace signs $4 bil. Chunmoo missile contract with Poland
Law & Crime

Police transfer Unification Church leader to prosecution over alleged illegal political donations

Police have transferred Unification Church leader Han Hak-ja and three other church officials to the prosecution over their alleged involvement in illegal political donations, officials said Tuesday. Han, who is currently in custody over bribery charges involving former first lady Kim Keon Hee, was among the four suspects a special investigation team handed over the previous day. The other suspects are Yun Young-ho, former head of the church's global headquarters, Jeong Won-ju, Han's former chief secretary, and Song Gwang-seok, a former head of the Universal Peace Foundation affiliated with the church. They are accused of giving illegal donations to both ruling and opposition politicians in an organized way in early 2019. Police believe church officials made the donations under their names and were later reimbursed by the church. Han is suspected of orchestrating the illegal donations, while the others are believed to have made the donations. The church leader and Jeong are already standing trial on charges of making separate illegal donations to main opposition People Power Party lawmake

Dec 30, 2025By Yonhap
Police transfer Unification Church leader to prosecution over alleged illegal political donations
Politics

Lee calls for 'unity, inclusion' amid backlash over his pick of opposition figure as minister

President Lee Jae Myung called for "unity and inclusion" on Tuesday after his nomination of an opposition politician to a ministerial post drew backlash from both the ruling and opposition blocs. Lee made the remarks during a Cabinet meeting, stressing that sustained efforts toward unity are essential to building a society that moves away from extreme confrontation and toward one that embraces differences. "This is not a political maneuver," Lee said. "If we are to return to a normal society, we must make efforts toward unity and inclusion more strongly and consistently." "If only those who took part in the struggle for power are allowed to enjoy everything and everyone else is excluded, that is not politics but war," he said. On Sunday, Lee nominated Lee Hye-hoon, a former three-term conservative lawmaker, to head the newly established Ministry of Planning and Budget. But her nomination has sparked criticism from both sides of the aisle, especially since she is known to have supported Yoon Suk Yeol's martial law bid. Lee Hye-hoon apologized Tuesday for her past remarks supporting the bot

Dec 30, 2025By Yonhap
Lee calls for 'unity, inclusion' amid backlash over his pick of opposition figure as minister
Campus

Hanyang University launches Shandong Alumni Association to expand global student network

Hanyang University held the inaugural ceremony of its Shandong International Alumni Association in Qingdao on Dec. 20, bringing together alums from China’s Shandong region as part of its broader effort to expand its global international student network, the university said Monday. The Shandong association marks the university’s fourth international alum group, following the launch of associations in Shanghai in 2023, Beijing in 2024 and Malaysia in November this year. The university noted that the launch of the Shandong chapter reflects its continued efforts to build and strengthen international student alum communities across overseas regions. Around 90 people attended the ceremony, including local alums, university officials and the head of the Korean alum association. Zhang Yafei, a member of the class of 2011 who earned a master’s degree in cultural contents studies, was appointed the inaugural president of the Shandong association. Si Xiaoyu, a 2021 graduate with a master’s degree in management information systems, was appointed auditor. Presidents of the previously establish

Dec 30, 2025By Jung Da-hyun
Hanyang University launches Shandong Alumni Association to expand global student network
South Korea

Foreign tourists to S. Korea jump 17% in November, close to record 20 mil. for 2025

The number of foreign visitors to South Korea rose sharply in November, climbing 17.3 percent from a year earlier as the country's tourism sector continues to recover to pre-pandemic levels, official data showed Tuesday. According to figures from the Korea Tourism Organization (KTO), about 1.6 million foreign tourists visited in November, up from 1.36 million a year ago and 9.6 percent higher than the same month in 2019, before the COVID-19 pandemic. China remained the largest source of visitors with 378,000 arrivals, followed by Japan at 363,000, Taiwan at 158,000, the United States at 133,000 and the Philippines at 60,000. While the number of Chinese tourists recovered to around 75 percent of 2019 levels, Japanese tourist arrivals surged 40.4 percent compared with the same period that year. From January to November, South Korea welcomed 17.42 million foreign tourists, a 15.4 percent increase from the same period last year and 8.6 percent above 2019 levels, the KTO said. Visitors from China accounted for 29.2 percent, or about 5.09 million, of the total. The Ministry of Culture, Sports a

Dec 30, 2025By Yonhap
Foreign tourists to S. Korea jump 17% in November, close to record 20 mil. for 2025
South Korea

Court merges insurrection trials of ex-President Yoon, ex-defense, police chiefs

A Seoul court on Tuesday combined the insurrection trials of former President Yoon Suk Yeol, former Defense Minister Kim Yong-hyun and former police chief Cho Ji-ho over their involvement in last year's failed martial law bid into a single trial. The announcement came during Yoon's trial hearing on charges of leading an insurrection at the Seoul Central District Court, which had been conducted separately from the trials of former military and defense officials, including Kim, and of Cho and other police leadership. The court bench had earlier said it would merge the three trials as they deal with identical facts and have the same points of contention over charges of insurrection. Six of the eight defendants of the three trials were present at the courtroom, including Yoon, the former defense chief and Kim Bong-sik, former head of the Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency. The bench plans to conduct witness examination on the former defense minister during Tuesday's trial before carrying out evidence examination next week.

Dec 30, 2025By Yonhap
Court merges insurrection trials of ex-President Yoon, ex-defense, police chiefs
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