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VIDEO A day of a Korean psychiatrist living in a country that won't admit it needs one

South Korea has held the highest suicide rate in the OECD for years — more than double the global average. It also has one of the lowest doctor-to-patient ratios in the developed world. The math is grim, and well-documented. What it doesn't explain is why so many Koreans who need help still won't walk through a psychiatrist's door. The reason often comes down to two letters and a number. In Korea's national health insurance system, every psychiatric visit is logged under an "F code" — the classification used for mental and behavioral disorders. F32 for depression. F41 for anxiety. F90 for ADHD. The codes are protected by medical confidentiality law and cannot be shared without the patient's consent. And yet the fear of the F code is one of the most persistent reasons Koreans avoid psychiatric care. Patients worry the code will resurface — in a future insurance application, a background check, some unspecified moment where a single record might cost them something. It is a fear shaped less by what the law permits than by what Korean society still quietly believes: that depression i

By Yu Seung-eun
[VIDEO] A day of a Korean psychiatrist  living in a country that won't admit it needs one
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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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China, South Korea, Japan foreign ministers meet in Beijing amid strained ties

Foreign ministers from China, South Korea and Japan vowed to strengthen trilateral relations in a meeting on the outskirts of Beijing on Wednesday (August 21).Ties between South Korea and Japan are arguably at their lowest ebb since their relationship was normalized in 1965, hit by a heated feud over the issue South Korean forced labor during World War Two which spilled over into a bitter tit-for-tat trade row.Foreign ministers Kang Kyung-wha of South Korea, Taro Kono of Japan and China's Wang Yi shook hands and posed for the media before sitting down to talks.Kang and Kono are also expected to meet separately on the sidelines of the event, the first meeting between the the two counterparts since South Korean President Moon Jae-in urged dialogue between the two countries to mend ties last week.This is the ninth such trilateral meeting, the last being three years ago. From 2008, the three countries had agreed to hold a summit every year to foster regional cooperation. But bilateral tension, including that between China and Japan, has often intervened. (Reuters

Aug 21, 2019By Choi Won-suk
China, South Korea, Japan foreign ministers meet in Beijing amid strained ties
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Facebook, Twitter spot fake posts on Hong Kong protests

Twitter and Facebook say they've dismantled a state-backed information operation originating in mainland China that sought to undermine protests in Hong Kong. Jane Lanhee Lee reports.Facebook on Monday (August 20) said it removed seven pages, three groups and five accounts that it says were involved in coordinated inauthentic behavior that originated in China.The content in question includes a post showing an image of protesters in Hong Kong paired with an image ISIS militants with a caption that - when translated - reads "what's the difference?"Several other posts make the same comparison.Facebook said its investigation found that the individuals behind the influence campaign were linked to the Chinese government.The investigation came after a tip from Twitter, which said it found a significant state-backed information operation trying to undermine the protests in Hong Kong. Twitter said it had identified close to a thousand accounts from inside the People's Republic of China where both Twitter and Facebook are blocked.Reuters social media reporter Elizabeth

Aug 20, 2019By Choi Won-suk
Facebook, Twitter spot fake posts on Hong Kong protests
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2019 Miss Korea: beauty inside and out

Massively voluminous hair and genuine smiles ― beauty queens are often known for their aesthetically pleasing appearances more than any other traits. However, 2019 Miss Korea talks about what she believes is the most important aspect ― inner beauty.

Aug 19, 2019By Lee Min-young
2019 Miss Korea: beauty inside and out
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Korea-Japan civic ties will stay strong: Japanese activist

Interviewed by Jung Da-min Video by Lee Min-young, Kim Kang-minSeoul-Tokyo relations seem to be at their lowest since 1965 amid an ongoing trade row. But there is hope that the conflict could be resolved through the solidarity between civic groups of Japan and South Korea, said a Japanese activist. Hideki Yano, 69, who has dedicated 24 years to promoting civic groups' joint action for historical settlement of wartime forced labor issues, said Seoul-Tokyo relations have passed many points of inflection in different fields including not just politics but also economy and culture. His battle to win civic groups' support started in 1995 when he received a request from surviving Zainichi Korean victims of forced labor asking for help to win a legal suit against Nippon Steel.Although many positive changes have resulted from cultural exchanges between Seoul and Tokyo, he feels a "sense of crisis" these days when it comes to gaps in historical awareness, Yano said during an interview with The Korea Times at the Press Center in central Seoul, Wednesday. He was visiting Seoul to atte

Aug 14, 2019By Lee Min-young
Korea-Japan civic ties will stay strong: Japanese activist
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Trump: Kim says ready to restart talks when U.S.-S.Korea joint drills end

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Saturday that Kim Jong Un told him North Korea was ready to resume talks on its nuclear and missile program as soon as U.S.-South Korea military exercises ended. Emer McCarthy reports.Talks between the United States and North Korea may soon be back on the table.U.S. President Donald Trump said on Saturday North Korean leader Kim Jong Un was ready to resume talks on its nuclear and missile program, as soon as U.S.-South Korea military exercises ended.Trump tweeted that Kim complained of the "ridiculous and expensive" exercises and would like to meet and start negotiations as soon as the joint drills were over.The president's remarks come after the secretive state fired what appeared to be two short-range missiles on Saturday (August 10).South Korea called the launch a "show of force" against the annual military exercises and has called for Pyongyang to stop such launches.But Donald Trump is continuing to play them down, telling reporters on Friday - quote - "I say it again: There have been no nuclear tests. The mis

Aug 13, 2019By Choi Won-suk
Trump: Kim says ready to restart talks when U.S.-S.Korea joint drills end
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South Koreans hold anti-Abe rally

Thousands of South Koreans took part in a candle-lit rally on Saturday (August 10) to protest against Japan's decision to impose restrictions on exports from its Asian neighbour.Protesters holding candles and placards reading "No Abe" gathered next to a "comfort women" statue near the Japanese embassy in Seoul. The statue commemorates Korean women forced to work in Japanese military brothels during World War Two.Earlier in the day, South Korean activists launched what they termed "No Abe Street"; hanging three hundred placards reading "No Abe" on the trees along a Seoul street near Seodaemun Prison where independent activists were jailed during the Japan's colonial rule.Protesters shout slogans as they hold signs and candles during a rally denouncing Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe and also demanding the South Korean government to abolish the General Security of Military Information Agreement, or GSOMIA, an intelligence-sharing agreement between South Korea and Japan, near the Japanese embassy in Seoul, South Korea, Saturday, Aug. 10, 2019. The letters read "No Abe.

Aug 12, 2019By Choi Won-suk
South Koreans hold anti-Abe rally
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From North Korean defector to YouTube star

21-year-old Kang Na-ra fled to South Korea from the North in 2014 and is now a beauty and cosmetics social media influencer in Seoul. She said while the South Korean products still triumph, North Korean products are increasingly jumping on the K-beauty bandwagon. Michelle Hennessy reports.21-year-old Kang Na-Ra is a beauty influencer in South Korea. But the products she's reviewing here can't be bought where she lives in Seoul.That's because these beauty items are from North Korea. Kang is originally from the North she's a defector who fled just five years ago.Reuters brought her the North Korean cosmetics, which can also be bought in Russia and China. Here she's filming a comparison between products from the communist North, and the beauty-obsessed South.Kang Na-ra, a North Korean defector who is now a beauty YouTuber, puts on her makeup with North Korean cosmetic products, in Seoul, South Korea, June 11, 2019. Picture taken on June 11, 2019. ReutersFor a reclusive country that tightly regulates its citizens' appearance, the results might be surprising:1-YEAR-OLD NORT

Aug 12, 2019By Choi Won-suk
From North Korean defector to YouTube star
News

South Koreans are boycotting anything Japanese

At supermarkets across the country, Japanese products are being pulled off shelves as a "Boycott Japan" movement quickly gathers steam online.Korean customers are shunning beer, snacks or anything else from Japan. It's a hit that merchants here - are willing to take.SOUTH KOREAN DIRECTOR AT PRUNE-MART, CHO MIN-HYUK, SAYING:"We expect a 10-15% revenue drop. But despite our losses as a small business, we're going ahead with the boycott to protest the unfair export restrictions."Protesters in South Korea see the limits as retaliation after the two sides clashed on an issue that stretches back to World War Two. Japan had colonized the Korean peninsula and forced many Koreans to work for its companies during wartime.South Korea recently asked Japan to start a joint fund for the victims but Japan refused.It considers the matter settled. Instead, Tokyo slapped on trade restrictions, sparking Korean anger and the boycotts.Online, screenshots of Japan trip cancellations have been trending on social media.Twenty-nine-year-old Lee Sang-Won took a $100 hit

Aug 2, 2019By Choi Won-suk
South Koreans are boycotting anything Japanese
  • Boycott of Japanese goods to intensify as Tokyo expands export curbs
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Angry Korean fans to sue after Ronaldo no show

Angry Korean fans to sue after Ronaldo no show.Football fans in South Korea are seeking compensation after Cristiano Ronaldo failed to play in a pre-season friendly. (Reuters)

Aug 2, 2019By Choi Won-suk
Angry Korean fans to sue after Ronaldo no show
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Inside Camp Humphreys: The largest overseas US army base

Behind the thick brick wall of the U.S. military base in Pyeongtaek, Gyeonggi Province, some 65-kilometers south of Seoul, the environment is completely different to that of the rest of the city. The United States Army Garrison Humphreys, also known as USAG Humphreys, is America's largest overseas military base which is home to some 25-thousand people.The Korea Times had a rare chance to film inside the base, and see how American troops have created home away from home.

Jul 29, 2019By Lee Min-young
Inside Camp Humphreys: The largest overseas US army base
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