Most Popular
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Exports to US reach all-time high, widen gap with China
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Trump rekindles criticism: US forces defending 'wealthy' S. Korea 'free of charge'
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[Music in drama] Rekindle a love that slipped through your fingers
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S. Korea discussed possible participation in AUKUS Pillar 2 with Australia: defense minister
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[New faces of Assembly] Architect behind ‘audacious initiative’ believes in denuclearized North Korea
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On May Day, labor unions blast Yoon's foreign nanny proposal
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Seoul Metro to seek legal action against malicious complaints
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Illit, mired in controversy, remains on Billboard charts for 5th week
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[KH Explains] Will alternative trading platform shake up Korean stock market?
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S. Korea lowers COVID-19 warning level, lifts last-remaining antivirus mandates
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Media firm chief acquitted of insulting President Lee
A local court acquitted the chief of an online media firm Friday of charges of insulting and threatening President Lee Myung-bak in a hostile online posting.Shin Sang-cheol, head of online news outlet Surprise, was indicted on the charges in February after a conservative group sued him over his posting on the company’s website that allegedly threatened the president with foul words.He told prosecutors that he wrote it after the prosecution launched an investigation into former President Roh Moo-
Sept. 7, 2012
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Mannam charity denies recruiting for fringe church
A volunteer organization for foreigners embroiled in controversy over its connections with a controversial church has denied that it is a recruiting tool for the religious institution. Mannam Volunteer Association, an organization that offers language and cooking classes to foreigners as well as recruits them for charitable activities, released a statement on Sunday addressing its connection to Shinchonji, a church founded in 1984, and World Peace Initiative, a group which, according to its webs
Sept. 7, 2012
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Top conservation group denies praise of four-river project
JEJU ― A top official of the International Union for Conservation of Nature on Friday denied the presidential office’s claim that she expressed positive views on Korea’s controversial four-river restoration project. In June, Cheong Wa Dae said that Julia Marton-Lefevre, secretary-general of the world’s largest environmental organization, highly evaluated the river project during a courtesy call on President Lee Myung-bak.“I am afraid I was misquoted,” she told a news conference. She was attendin
Sept. 7, 2012
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4 lawmakers quit UPP over factional infighting
Four lawmakers of the minor opposition Unified Progressive Party quit the scandal-ridden party Friday to establish a new form of progressive politics.Their “voluntary self-expulsion” was approved in a meeting of the UPP lawmakers, leaving it with nine seats in the 300-member Assembly. The four lawmakers accepted expulsion from the party’s Seoul chapter in order to keep their seats in parliament. Under South Korean law, lawmakers elected on a proportional representative ticket lose their legisla
Sept. 7, 2012
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Obama thanks HUFS president
U.S. President Barack Obama sent an appreciation letter to Park Chul, the president of the Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, in appreciation of kindness and hospitality he had received during his visit in March to the university. In the letter Obama said that he and his wife, Michelle extended their deep thanks to Park. He said he believes Koreans and Americans can meet shared challenges and build a brighter future for all nations as both share an enduring bond. Obama made a speech at the un
Sept. 7, 2012
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Park GH’s sister-in-law resigns from law jobs
A sister-in-law of Rep. Park Geun-hye, the ruling Saenuri Party’s presidential candidate, has left her posts at a law firm and the nation’s land and housing firm. Seo Hyang-hee, wife of the presidential candidate’s younger brother Park Ji-man, resigned as a representative lawyer at law firm Sebit and a legal adviser for the Korea Land and Housing Corporation (LH), the state-run land and housing developer.Seo worked as a legal adviser for two years for Samhwa Savings Bank before it went bankrupt
Sept. 7, 2012
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Appearance No. 1 preference for ideal wife: survey
More than three out of 10 single men around the world cited appearance as their No. 1 preference for an ideal would-be wife, a survey showed Friday.According to the survey by South Korea’s matchmaking company Sunwoo of its 41,036 single male clients from 121 countries, 31.1 percent said appearance is the primary attribute for their ideal spouse, followed by personality with 28.5 percent, occupation or ability with 21.7 percent and family background with 18.7 percent.The survey was conducted onli
Sept. 7, 2012
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Media firm chief acquitted of insulting Lee
A local court acquitted the chief of an online media firm Friday of charges of insulting and threatening President Lee Myung-bak in a hostile online posting.Shin Sang-cheol, head of online news outlet Surprise, was indicted on the charges in February after a conservative group sued him over his posting on the company's Web site that allegedly threatened the president with foul words.He told prosec
Sept. 7, 2012
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Mannam volunteer group denies recruiting for fringe church
Mannam charity denies recruiting for fringe churchBy John Power A volunteer organization for foreigners embroiled in controversy over its connections with a controversial church has denied that it is a recruiting tool for the religious institution. Mannam Volunteer Association, an organization that offers language and cooking classes to foreigners as well as recruits them for charitable activities, released a statement on Sunday addressing its connection to Shinchonji, a church founded in 1984,
Sept. 7, 2012
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College classmates embroiled in proxy presidential war
The confrontation between professor Ahn Cheol-soo and the ruling Saenuri Party is getting more personal following accusations made by his close ally against a party official.Questions are now arising about the relationship between Geum Tae-seop, a lawyer working with Ahn, and his friend Jeong Joon-gil, a former prosecutor and now member of Saenuri’s communications team.Geum claimed on Thursday that Jeong had threatened him in a phone call to disclose “bribery and woman problems” surrounding Ahn
Sept. 6, 2012
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Activists cry foul over blocked ...access to WCC
JEJU ― Local groups opposing the construction of a naval base on the island of Jeju denounced the government Thursday for denying them access to the IUCN World Conservation Congress, a major gathering of environmental professionals from around the world. Villagers of Gangjeong, a small village on the southern coast of Jeju chosen as the site for the planned base, had sought to set up a booth inside the Jeju Convention Center, where the conference will be held till Sept. 15, but to no avail. “Isn
Sept. 6, 2012
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Lee upholds green growth
JEJU ― President Lee Myung-bak on Thursday sought to promote the concept of green growth to participants of a major environmental meeting in Jeju. Speaking in front of thousands of environmental professionals, government policymakers and businessmen, he said that the country, which in 2008 set green growth as a new national development strategy, is taking efforts to a new level on the belief that “flourishing nature makes people happy.”“The slogan of the WCC is Nature+, which shares a common den
Sept. 6, 2012
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Giant water bugs: predators in the pond
Giant water bugs, once commonly found in rice fields and ponds throughout the country, are now rated as a second-class endangered species. Efforts to restore their population have been under way for years, led by private biodiversity research centers. In the latest of the efforts, Holoce Ecosystem Conservation Research Institution in Hoengseong, Gangwon Province, reintroduced 40 pairs of the rare insects, to a nearby pond last week. They were among about 400 entomologist Lee Gang-won bred in ca
Sept. 6, 2012
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Conservation forum discusses nature’s role
Over 8,000 gather in Jeju for world’s largest environmental eventJEJU ― The IUCN World Conservation Congress kicked off its 10-day run on Jeju Island on Thursday, with over 8,000 participants from around the world in attendance. Over 8,600 people have registered for the conference, the largest in history, said the organizer, the International Union for Conservation of Nature. Under the theme “Resilient Nature,” participants will hold discussions on 176 initiatives that include climate change, pr
Sept. 6, 2012
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Overseas Koreans return to serve their motherland
More than 1,000 Korean men living overseas have returned home to serve in the military over the past six years, according to the Korean Army Training Center. Ever since the Army began offering a pre-training program at a boot camp in Nonsan, South Chungcheong Province in 2007, 1,038 men with foreign residency have trained there. The one-week pre-training is designed to provide overseas Korean men with no experience here with basic instruction on Korean history and culture to help them adapt to t
Sept. 6, 2012
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Seoul City’s ‘rain tax’ plan in backlash
Seoul City’s plan to introduce a “rain tax” scheme to promote a better use of rainwater and improve flood control is stoking debate as civic groups and experts raise concerns about the additional burden on property owners. The envisioned tax, modeled on a German scheme, would be collected based on the area of impervious surface on a property that generates storm runoff directed to local drains. The greater the impervious area, the less landowners would be charged. The plan comes as part of the m
Sept. 6, 2012
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Climber Um to accompany Lee on Arctic trip
Um Hong-gil, a prominent South Korean climber who was the world’s first to scale the globe’s 16 tallest mountains, will accompany President Lee Myung-bak on his upcoming Arctic trip as a symbolic move to underscore the seriousness of climate change, officials said Thursday.Lee is scheduled to visit Greenland next week for talks with Premier Kuupik Kleist about green growth, resource development and other issues. Lee plans to travel to Ilulissat, a UNESCO World Heritage site known for its famous
Sept. 6, 2012
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Prominent climber, cartoon artist to accompany President Lee on Arctic trip
Um Hong-gil, a prominent South Korean climber who was the world’s first to scale the globe’s 16 tallest mountains, will accompany President Lee Myung-bak on his upcoming Arctic trip as a symbolic move to underscore the seriousness of climate change, officials said Thursday.Lee is scheduled to visit Greenland next week for talks with Premier Kuupik Kleist about green growth, resource development and other issues. Lee plans to travel to Ilulissat, a UNESCO World Heritage site known for its famous
Sept. 6, 2012
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Social media driving TV viewing habits
The television viewing behavior of young adults is being strongly influenced by social media interactions, a U.S. survey found.The study by Horowitz Associates found 24 percent of 18- to-34-year-old adults and 30 percent of 15- to-17-year-olds saying they have started watching a show on TV because of something they saw online or through social media.This compares to 16 percent when all adult viewers 18 years and older are considered, Media Daily News reported Wednesday.Social media are involved
Sept. 6, 2012
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Unification Church's automaking venture chief returns to South
The head of the Unification Church's joint automaking venture said Wednesday that he received North Korea's condolence message over the death of its founder Rev. Sun Myung Moon, but did not confirm the North's dispatch of adelegation to the funeral."I received the message of condolence (over the death of Rev. Moon) from North Korea," said Pyeonghwa Motors President Park Sang-kwon, a U.S. national,
Sept. 5, 2012