my timesThe Korea Times

South Korea

PoliticsDefenseGlobal CommunityEnvironment & AnimalsLaw & CrimeHealthSocietyOthersK-universitiesUniversity Rankings
  • Environment & Animals

    As record heat looms, Seoul deploys high-tech fog, canopies to cool residents

    Facing forecasts of an unseasonably brutal summer and the earliest heat-related fatality on record, municipal authorities here are transforming the capital’s public spaces into a fortified network of cooling zones to combat extreme urban temperatures. The seasonal counteroffensive, scheduled to run through Sept. 30, comes after the Korea Meteorological Administration projected that mean temperatures this summer will significantly exceed seasonal norms. The threat took on new urgency when a heat-related death was recorded on May 15 — the earliest such fatality since the country established its emergency room heat illness surveillance system in 2011. To protect pedestrians in a sprawling metropolis dominated by asphalt and concrete, the Seoul Metropolitan Government is rolling out an array of architectural and mechanical interventions. Among the additions are "Happiso" zones — air-dome-equipped outdoor cooling shelters — scheduled to be pitched at 14 high-traffic landmarks, including Gwanghwamun Square and Cheonggye Plaza. The city will also deploy large canopy-style shade structu

    2 MIN READBy Jhoo Dong-chan
    As record heat looms, Seoul deploys high-tech fog, canopies to cool residents
  • Law & Crime

    Customs agency's secondary mail screening nets 3 drug smuggling cases in 60 days

    2 MIN READBy Jun Ji-hye
    Customs agency's secondary mail screening nets 3 drug smuggling cases in 60 days
  • South Korea

    A $330 Airbnb room? This is among cheaper options in Busan during BTS concerts

    2 MIN READBy Kim Bo-eun
    A $330 Airbnb room? This is among cheaper options in Busan during BTS concerts
  • Law & Crime

    Ex-presidential secretary sentenced to 1 1/2 yrs in prison for drafting false martial law document

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Ex-presidential secretary sentenced to 1 1/2 yrs in prison for drafting false martial law document
  • Society

    Lee calls for stern punishment for those responsible for fatal overpass collapse in Seoul

    1 MIN READBy Yonhap
    Lee calls for stern punishment for those responsible for fatal overpass collapse in Seoul
Korea Times
About Us
Introduction
History
Contact Us
Products & Services
Subscribe
E-paper
RSS Service
Content Sales
Site Map
Policy
Code of Ethics
Ombudsman
Privacy Policy
Youth Protection Policy
Terms of Service
Copyright Policy
Family Site
Hankookilbo
Dongwha Group
FacebookXYoutubeInstagram
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.

Read more

Law & Crime

Police raid POSCO E&C over electrocution accident involving Myanmar worker

Police raided builder POSCO E&C on Tuesday over an electrocution accident involving a Myanmarese worker earlier this month. The worker in his 30s was checking water pumps at an expressway construction site in Gwangmyeong, just southwest of Seoul, on Aug. 4 when he apparently got an electric shock. He has yet to regain consciousness. Around 70 police and labor ministry officials raided the headquarters of contractor POSCO E&C in Incheon, west of Seoul, and the Seoul office of a subcontractor to seize relevant documents and files. President Lee Jae Myung has vowed tough action against fatal industrial accidents. Last week, he singled out POSCO E&C over repeated fatal accidents at its labor sites and instructed his aides to consider revoking the company's construction license and excluding it from public bidding.

Aug 12, 2025By Yonhap
Police raid POSCO E&C over electrocution accident involving Myanmar worker
Politics

Ex-first lady Kim Keon Hee arrested

A local court issued an arrest warrant for Kim Keon Hee, wife of former President Yoon Suk Yeol, Wednesday, on stock price manipulation and other charges. The court decision led to the unprecedented case of both a former president and first lady being imprisoned at the same time, as Yoon is currently in pretrial detention on insurrection charges. Kim has also become the first former first lady to be arrested. The Seoul Central District Court issued the warrant for Kim, citing risks of destroying evidence, noting her inconsistent statements during questioning and concerns she might coordinate testimony with her former aides and other suspects. Kim, who had been waiting for the court decision at the Seoul Nambu Detention Center, took procedure for confinement upon the warrant issuance. Kim faces charges of involvement in stock price rigging, meddling in the candidate nomination process for the 2022 by-elections and taking bribes in return for business favors to several companies and the Unification Church. Kim's demeanor on Tuesday for the court hearing stood in stark contrast to her appear

Aug 12, 2025By Bahk Eun-ji
Ex-first lady Kim Keon Hee arrested
Society

‘Will stab you if you put a sticker on my car’ note in Gwangju under police probe

Police are investigating a threatening note found on a parked car at an apartment complex in Gwangju, warning that anyone who places a parking violation sticker on the vehicle would be stabbed, Newsis and other outlets reported. The note, which read “If you put a sticker on my car, I’ll find you and stab you in the stomach,” was discovered on the windshield of a vehicle in an apartment complex in Hwajeong-dong, Seo District, according to Gwangju Seobu Police Station, Monday. A photo of the note, along with a post criticizing it, was uploaded to an online community. The poster wrote, “This was found in an apartment complex in Seo District with more than 2,000 households. Ground parking is allowed only from 10 p.m. to 8 a.m., and it seems someone angry over a violation sticker wrote this. The apartment chatroom is full of people saying they are scared.” Police became aware of the case through a citizen report filed with the national e-government portal and have assigned it to the criminal investigation team. They are considering charges under the newly enacted “public intimidati

Aug 12, 2025By Hankookilbo
‘Will stab you if you put a sticker on my car’ note in Gwangju under police probe
Society

Gyeongju hotel under fire for exposing women’s sauna to outside view

A well-known hotel in Gyeongju, North Gyeongsang Province, is facing backlash after it was revealed that its women’s sauna and changing room were visible from outside. The hotel suspended sauna operations and began replacing aged glass film, but the victim says the humiliation remains. An online community post titled “Women’s sauna visible from outside?!” detailed the problem on Aug. 8. The poster, identified as A, wrote that while on a three-night family trip to the hotel with two children, they took a walk on the lawn surrounding the building before returning to their room on the final night. A said they noticed a person without a shirt walking inside a glass-walled area on the third floor, which they initially assumed was the men’s sauna. After checking the layout with their wife, they realized it was the women’s sauna. “From my height, I could see the person’s shoulder blades and back, but my wife, who is taller, could likely see further down,” A said. A’s wife was also clearly visible from the lawn while standing in the sauna’s changing room. When A informed a

Aug 12, 2025By Hankookilbo
Gyeongju hotel under fire for exposing women’s sauna to outside view
Society

Koreans’ preference for sons plummets as more say they want daughters

Click here for more articles by Kormedi.com. “I’m sorry, I should have taken better care of you.” These are the words an 80-something mother, who is recovering from a stroke, often says to her middle-aged daughter. The elderly woman, who suffers from partial paralysis and vision loss due to a cerebrovascular condition, is cared for by her daughter. Her only son rarely visits. Before falling ill, she adored her son so much that the daughter felt she had been treated unequally. The mother’s regret reflects a growing shift in South Korea away from a deep-rooted preference for sons. A Gallup International survey conducted from Nov. 11-25, 2024, on 1,534 adults in Korea (excluding Jeju Island) found that among Koreans in their 50s and younger, more people preferred having a daughter than a son. Women in their 30s and 40s showed the strongest preference for daughters, with rates in the 40-percent range. Only among those aged 60 and older was the preference nearly balanced at 23 percent for sons and 20 percent for daughters. Overall, the preference for sons among Koreans has dropped fro

Aug 11, 2025By Kormedi.com
Koreans’ preference for sons plummets as more say they want daughters
Society

Korea moves closer to legalizing nonmedical tattooing after 33-year ban

Korea is on the verge of ending its decades-long ban on tattooing by nonmedical professionals, with a landmark bill set for debate in the National Assembly later this month which could transform an underground art form into a regulated, recognized profession. Tattooists from across the nation and union leaders rallied outside the National Assembly in Seoul, Monday, urging lawmakers to pass the proposed Tattooist Act ― a legislative bill that, after decades of prohibition and legal wrangling, could finally legalize professional tattooing by people other than medical doctors in Korea. The revision bill will be formally brought forward for discussion in a legislative subcommittee of the Assembly again on Aug. 20 after previous botched attempts to pass the idea into law. “For 33 years, our work has been treated as a crime,” said Lee So-mi, vice chair of the Tattoo Union under the Federation of Korean Chemical and Textile Food Workers’ Union. “We are asking the National Assembly to recognize our sacred right to labor and protect the safety of 13 million tattoo consumers. It’s time

Aug 11, 2025By Lee Hae-rin
Korea moves closer to legalizing nonmedical tattooing after 33-year ban
Defense

USFK commander says role of UN Command to 'absolutely' evolve amid N. Korea-Russia cooperation

The commander of the U.S. Forces Korea (USFK) has said the role of the U.S.-led multinational U.N. Command (UNC) will "absolutely" continue to evolve amid regional security challenges, such as deepening alignment between North Korea and Russia. The remark by Gen. Xavier Brunson, who also serves as the commander of the UNC and the South Korea-U.S. Combined Forces Command, came as North Korea and Russia have been seeking to strengthen their military cooperation through the deployment of troops and weapons. "That cooperation matters even more now, as we see the DPRK drawing closer to Russia, and as Indo-Pacific and European security become more tightly linked," Brunson said in a written statement released Monday to the defense press corps. DPRK is the acronym of North Korea's formal name. Brunson called UNC member states "like-minded nations putting people, resources, and political will behind the enforcement of the Armistice and the broader stability of Northeast Asia" and voiced expectation for an expansion in their roles as well as new memberships. Last year, Germany formally joined the

Aug 11, 2025By Yonhap
USFK commander says role of UN Command to 'absolutely' evolve amid N. Korea-Russia cooperation
Politics

Ex-Justice Minister Cho Kuk given presidential pardon ahead of Liberation Day

President Lee Jae Myung on Monday granted a special pardon to Cho Kuk, former head of the minor liberal Rebuilding Korea Party, despite fierce protest from conservative political parties and civic groups. Cho has been jailed for academic fraud involving his children. The ruling Democratic Party of Korea (DPK), which has claimed Cho was scapegoated and subjected to a wrongful and excessive investigation for political reasons, hopes that this decision will consolidate liberal supporters and build momentum for judicial reform. However, the opposition has condemned the pardon as an affront to justice. Lee approved Cho's pardon during an extraordinary Cabinet meeting held to discuss the list of special presidential pardons for National Liberation Day, following its review by the Ministry of Justice last week. The session was held a day before a regularly scheduled Cabinet meeting, with aides saying the president wanted to deal with the politically controversial issue separately from the economic and social policy discussions. Cho, who was also a senior presidential secretary for civil affairs

Aug 11, 2025By Bahk Eun-ji
Ex-Justice Minister Cho Kuk given presidential pardon ahead of Liberation Day
  • S. Korea grapples with long-standing debate over presidential pardons
Politics

Special counsel asks for ex-first lady to be held at different detention center from Yoon

Special counsel Min Joong-ki's team said Monday they have asked for former first lady Kim Keon Hee to be placed at a detention center different from the one where her husband and former President Yoon Suk Yeol is held in the event an arrest warrant is issued for her. Min's team requested a warrant for Kim last Thursday, a day after questioning her over her alleged involvement in a stock price manipulation scheme, meddling in candidate nominations for the 2022 parliamentary by-elections, and bribe taking in exchange for business favors for the Unification Church. The Seoul Central District Court is scheduled to hold a hearing Tuesday to determine whether to issue the warrant on charges of violations of the Capital Market Act, the Political Funds Act and a law on the acceptance of bribes for mediation. "At the request of Seoul Detention Center, we submitted an application to the court requesting a change in the place for her detention and confinement from Seoul Detention Center to Seoul Southern Detention Center," the special counsel team said in a notice to the press. Kim was initially sc

Aug 11, 2025By Yonhap
Special counsel asks for ex-first lady to be held at different detention center from Yoon
Paw print

Love for pets, cost to Earth: hidden plastic footprint of pet ownership in Korea

As nearly one in four Korean households now include a companion animal, a quiet environmental crisis is taking shape behind the scenes. The booming pet care industry — projected to surpass $3.6 billion by 2024 — is generating an ever-increasing mountain of plastic waste. From food packaging to disposable waste bags and plastic toys, the environmental cost of loving pets often goes unnoticed, overshadowed by the affection and joy these animals provide. With rising global awareness of sustainability and plastic pollution, Korea finds itself facing a troubling regulatory gap as pet-related plastic products continue to be largely excluded from existing environmental laws and recycling schemes. This blind spot not only burdens consumers but risks undermining national efforts at waste reduction and a sustainable economy. It is time to bring this hidden issue to light and align Korea’s pet culture with the planet’s urgent need for care. This is because anyone choosing to share life with an animal companion should be mindful, not just of affection for the pet, but responsibility for the

Aug 11, 2025By Kim Min-ji
Love for pets, cost to Earth: hidden plastic footprint of pet ownership in Korea
previous page
449450451452453
next page

Most Read in South Korea