Category: Korea-General Topics

Strong Typhoon Maysak Making Landfall on South Korea

This is a pretty strong storm with wind speeds at roughly 100 mph; be safe everyone effected by this typhoon:

Typhoon Maysak Trajectory Map

Typhoon Maysak was barreling toward South Korea on Wednesday, putting the country on high alert over what was forecast to be one of the most powerful typhoons in years.

The typhoon was moving at 19 kph over seas some 190 kilometers south of Seogwipo in Jeju as of 3:00 p.m., according to the Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA). Its maximum wind speed was 45 meters per second.

Maysak was forecast to make landfall between Busan and Geoje at around 1:00 a.m. Thursday before moving northward to the country’s eastern coastal regions. It was then expected to travel to North Korea before downgrading near the North’s eastern city of Chongjin on Thursday night.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

Typhoon Maysak Projected to Approach South Korea Next Week

Here comes another typhoon heading towards South Korea:

Typhoon Maysak was churning toward the Korean Peninsula on Saturday from waters east of the Philippines and is expected to affect the Korean Peninsula in the middle of next week, weather authorities said.

The Korea Meteorological Administration (KMA) said that as of 3 a.m., the season’s ninth typhoon was traveling some 950 kilometers west-northwest of Manila at a speed of 8 kilometers per hour.

It is expected to pass through 1,050 kilometers west of Japan’s Okinawa Island as of 3 a.m. Sunday. 
The typhoon is forecast to reach waters some 210 kilometers south-southeast of Seogwipo, Jeju Island, by 3 p.m. Wednesday and then 40 kilometers away from the southern port city of Busan by 2 p.m. Thursday, the KMA said.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

Fight Breaks Out on Seoul Subway After Man Refuses to Wear a Mask

It appears even South Korea has anti-maskers though I suspect alcohol is probably more to blame for this confrontation on the subway:

A man in his 50s attacked two passengers who asked him to wear a mask on a line no.2 subway train during morning commute.

The man got angry when he was asked to put on a mask and began slapping the passenger on the face multiple times with his slipper.

Another passenger sitting nearby was also assaulted and verbally abused by the man who attempted to strangle him.

A total of 349 people have been arrested for face mask-related conflicts over the last three months since May 26 when the government applied a “No mask, no ride” policy on all public transportation.

Among them, 164 people were held for assault.

Korea Times

South Korea to Offer Free High School Education Beginning Next Year

For those that didn’t know, you have to pay to attend high school in South Korea. Elementary and middle school education is currently free and soon so will high school:

The South Korean government and the ruling Democratic Party have decided to allocate the Korean New Deal and the Youth Hope Package more than 20 trillion won (US$16.9 billion) each in the 2021 budget. The funding will make high school education free for all students next year, one year ahead of schedule. The government will also be greatly expanding the supply of public rental housing for young people and newlyweds.

Hankyoreh

You can read more at the link, but the natural progression of this is that people will be demanding free college next.

Little Damage and No Deaths Reported in South Korea from Typhoon Bavi

Here is some good news in a week of bad coronavirus news for South Korea:

Officials of Suyeong District Office in Busan clean up Gwangalli Beach on Thursday morning after Typhoon Bavi passed. [SONG BONG-GEUN]
Officials of Suyeong District Office in Busan clean up Gwangalli Beach on Thursday morning after Typhoon Bavi passed. [SONG BONG-GEUN]

No deaths were caused by Typhoon Bavi’s passage by Korea Wednesday and Thursday, but its strong winds damaged hundreds of houses and other structures.    
   
A 34-year-old resident of Paju, Gyeonggi, was injured on a street in his neighborhood in Wadong-dong around 5:46 a.m. on Thursday when a metal object dislodged from the top of an apartment building hit his head. 

Joong Ang Ilbo

You can read more at the link.

South Korea’s Daily Coronavirus Cases Increases to 441

The number of coronavirus cases continues to grow in South Korea, but despite this there have been no new deaths which hardly gets reported:

The number of travelers at Seoul Station, the country’s major train hub, is sharply reduced on Aug. 23, 2020, after the government strengthened the social distancing level amid spiking COVID-19 cases. (Yonhap)

Months after South Korea successfully flattened its coronavirus curve, the country, yet again at a crossroads in the face of the most daily new infections since early March, is inching closer to adopting the toughest-ever virus infection measures.

South Korea added 441 more COVID-19 cases Thursday, bringing the nation’s total caseload to 18,760, according to the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 

Thursday’s daily tally marks the largest since March 7 when the country was reeling from a large outbreak in the southeastern city of Daegu and its neighboring North Gyeongsang Province tied to the minor religious sect, Shincheonji.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

Seoul Reportedly Running Short of ICU Beds for Critically Ill Coronavirus Patients

In the entire greater Seoul area there is 319 ICU beds for patients with severe COVID and now 300 are filled up:

Health authorities Wednesday vowed to find more hospital beds for seriously ill coronavirus patients as more of Korea’s older population contract the disease, saying there were only 19 such beds left in the greater Seoul area by Tuesday evening.  
   
The promise came as the nation counted 320 new cases of Covid-19 on Tuesday, according to data released Wednesday morning by the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC). Monday’s toll was 280 cases.    
   
More than two-thirds of Tuesday’s case load came from the Seoul metropolitan area encompassing Seoul, Incheon and Gyeonggi, as a cluster from the Sarang Jeil Church in Seongbuk District, central Seoul — a controversial Presbyterian church mostly attended by older conservatives — continues to swell.  
   
Yoon Tae-ho, an official on the Korean central government’s Covid-19 command center, said during a Wednesday press briefing that more people in their 60s or above were contracting the virus lately, which was leading to an uptick of seriously ill patients. The older demographic is generally considered to be at higher risk for getting really sick from the coronavirus.  
  

Joong Ang Ilbo

You can read more at the link, but the claim of running out of beds is slightly misleading. This is because more beds can be allocated, but it will take away from the hospital’s ability to handle other patients for elective procedures. This is an issue that hospitals in the U.S. have had to deal with which can be financially troublesome because elective procedures generally make more money for the hospital compared to COVID patients.

Mutated Strain of the Coronavirus Now Responsible for Majority of Infections in South Korea

There is no evidence that the European, Middle East, North American strain of the coronavirus is more infectious, but it is interesting how this strain has now become the prevalent form of the virus in South Korea:

A health official disinfects a closed floor of a building at the government complex in Seoul on Aug. 26, 2020, after a security guard working at the complex was confirmed to have been infected with the new coronavirus. (Yonhap)

South Korea has been detecting more of a mutated strain of the new coronavirus that swept North America, Europe and the Middle East, health authorities said Wednesday, although there is no evidence that the mutation is more infectious. 

Based on the type of amino acid of a certain gene, the World Health Organization (WHO) classifies the novel coronavirus into seven strains — S, V, L, G, GH, GR and the rest. 

The GH strain, which is most common in North America, Europe and the Middle East, was first found in South Korea in April. 

Of a total of 685 patients, the number of patients infected with the GH strain stood at 169 in May, 223 in June, 47 in July and 85 in August, according to the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC).

The mutated strain accounted for 77.4 percent of the 685 patients, the KCDC said.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

President Moon Vows to Respond Sternly to Doctors Strike; Threatens Opposition Journalists and Protesters

President Moon has fighting words for the doctors that have gone on strike this week:

South Korean President Moon Jae-in sent a warning message on Aug. 24 to physician groups that launched a collective strike to protest plans to create new public health colleges and raise the admissions cap for medical schools.

“We will have no choice but to respond sternly to the collective use of force in violation of the law, such as strikes and walkouts,” Moon said, describing the current situation as a “desperate moment where the number of people infected [with COVID-19] could skyrocket anywhere at any time if we let down our guard even a little.”Presiding over a meeting of senior secretaries and aides at the Blue House that day, Moon said, “We would like the medical community to refrain from collective action.

Collective action that holds the public’s life hostage will not gain support at a time when we need to be harnessing our national capacities to stop the virus from spreading.”“One can oppose or criticize government policy, but it cannot cross the line of what is lawful,” he stressed in his first public message directed at the Korea Intern Resident Association (KIRA). (………………..)

“A Level 3 upgrade is by no means an easy decision to make. Daily life would come to a stop, jobs would collapse, and we would have to suffer through a truly enormous economic setback. We could even see a collapse of the healthcare system.

Hankyoreh

If President Moon is so concerned about his doomsday scenario then why doesn’t he scrap his medical reform plan? Additionally Moon in the article also hinted at putting more journalists and protesters in jail that don’t agree with his administration:

”Moon further hinted at plans for a stern response toward obstruction of disease prevention efforts and the spreading of fake news, which he referred to as “antisocial criminal acts.”“No religious freedom, no freedom of assembly, no freedom of expression can be proclaimed if it means causing such enormous harm to the South Korean public,” he declared, adding that he would “clearly establish the strict fairness of public authorities.”

You can read more at the link.

Tweet of the Day: Where is the No Masker?