Category: Korea-General Topics

Imprisoned Ex-ROK President Recovering from Shoulder Surgery

Here is the latest on ex-ROK President Park Geun-hye:

Ex-President Park Geun-hye’s shoulder surgery at St. Mary’s Hospital in Seoul went well, and she will take two to three months to recover, doctors said Tuesday. 

Park had been treated for about a year for pain in her left shoulder while in jail for abuse of power, bribery, coercion and leaking government secrets since March 2017. 

“I believe she experienced difficulties in getting dressed, going to the toilet, eating and other basic daily activities due to the pain,” said Kim Yang-soo, the surgeon who performed the operation. “Injections and other medications were unsuccessful and the surgery was necessary.”

Chosun Ilbo

You can read more at the link.

Tweet of the Day: Casting Call for Ebola Virus Model

Tweet of the Day: Chuseok Fashion

Tweet of the Day: From the South Side?

First Case of Swine Flu Reported in South Korea

Another infectious disease has come into South Korea likely from North Korea:

South Korea was on alert Tuesday to prevent the spread of African swine fever after the first case of the animal disease was confirmed near the border with North Korea.

The agriculture ministry announced the beginning of operations to slaughter some 4,000 pigs as a precautionary step.

Kim Hyeon-soo, minister of agriculture, food and rural affairs, said quarantine officials are set to complete the culling of the pigs at three farms, including the one where the disease was detected, in Paju, just south of the inter-Korean border, by Tuesday.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

Growing Drag Queen Culture in South Korea Highlighted By CNN

Via a reader tip comes this article about South Korea’s growing drag queen culture:

Hurricane Kimchi takes the stage at an underground bar in Seoul, dancing agilely to Wonder Girls’ 2008 K-pop hit “Nobody.”

Dressed in high heels, a fluffy white wig and a tight gold sequin dress — an homage to the song’s video — he commands a fervent crowd that cheers, sings along and throws money at his feet. At one point, an audience member runs up to shove a 10,000-won bill (around $9) inside his belt.

Drag queens remain a rare sight in South Korea. But Hurricane Kimchi’s alter-ego, LGBTQ activist Heezy Yang, is out to change perceptions in a country with traditionally conservative views on gender and sexuality.

The activist’s work ranges from writing a novel about his experience of coming out, to taking part in a mock gay wedding ceremony in Seoul’s metro. He is also the founder of the Seoul Drag Parade, an annual event that hopes to “encourage both queer and non-queer people to use drag to find their identity (and) express their true feelings, thoughts and style,” according to its website.

Then there are the weekday drag shows he organizes in Itaewon, a diverse international neighborhood that has become the capital’s main gay district and is known as “homo hill” to the LGBTQ community and locals.

CNN

You can read more at the link, but I can remember many years ago when the transgender folks used to hang out up in the TDC Ville trying to hook up with drunk soldiers.

Three Foreign Workers Killed at South Korean Fishery

Anyone surprised that these workers were killed because they did not have proper safety equipment?:

Rescue workers carry out relief work inside an underground tank at a fishery products processing factory in Yeongdeok, North Gyeongsang Province, on Sept. 10, 2019, in this photo provided by the North Gyeongsang Province Fire Service Headquarters.

Three migrant workers were found dead, and another one is in a coma, following an accident inside an underground tank at a fishery products processing factory in the eastern county of Yeongdeok on Tuesday, local fire authorities said. 

The four — three Thais and one Vietnamese — were found at the bottom of the tank at 2:30 p.m., according to the North Gyeongsang Province Fire Service Headquarters.

The workers, whose names have yet to be made public, are believed to have suffocated while doing maintenance work inside the tank at the factory in Chuksan Port in Yeongdeok, some 250 kilometers southeast of Seoul.

The 42-year-old and 28-year-old Thai workers and the 53-year-old Vietnamese person died in the accident, and the other victim, a 34-year-old Thai, is currently in a coma, the fire headquarters said. 

The tank stores byproducts from the processing of fish and shellfish, it added.

The rescue authorities said the workers appeared to have entered the tank without safety equipments even though there was a high risk of inhaling toxic gas from decomposed fishery products.

Yonhap

South Korea Maintains Developing Nation Status to Protect Agriculture Sector

It is things like South Korea claiming they are a developing country that gives weight to President Trump’s frequent criticisms of how these international organizations are unfair to American workers:

South Korea’s new agriculture minister has ruled out the possibility of abandoning the country’s special and differential treatment under the World Trade Organization regime, despite growing U.S. pressure to reform the global trade body.

In a recent brief comment to Yonhap News Agency, Kim Hyeon-soo said that South Korea has no plan to give up developing country status, underscoring the country’s efforts to keep the status intact, mainly to protect its sensitive agriculture industry, especially rice.

Currently, Asia’s fourth-largest economy imposes a 513 percent tariff on imported rice. Government data showed 54 percent of the 1 million South Korean farming households grow rice, a staple food for Koreans.

Yonhap

South Korea is one of the most developed and maybe even the most technologically advanced country I have ever been to and to claim they are a developing nation is ridiculous. President Trump is threatening to unilaterally consider South Korea and other nations in the WTO as developed nations if the WTO does not change its developing nation criteria.

Tweet of the Day: Imagine Such A Character

Typhoon Lingling Strikes South Korea, 3 Dead, More Injured

Here is the latest on Typhoon Lingling:

A spire from a church in Seoul lies on the top of a parked vehicle after Typhoon Lingling wreaked havoc in the region on Sept. 7, 2019. (Yonhap)

 At least three South Koreans were reported killed Saturday as Typhoon Lingling made landfall here, bringing heavy rains and strong winds that caused hundreds of minor accidents throughout the nation.

A woman in her 70s died after she was knocked over by strong winds gusting at 39 meters per second, or 140 kph, in Boryeong, some 150 kilometers southwest of Seoul, according to rescue officials there.

In Incheon, 40 kilometers west of the capital, a bus driver was crushed to death after a wall at a hospital parking lot collapsed.

Later in the day in Paju, north of Seoul, a 61-year-old man was killed after being struck in the head by a roof panel at a golf driving range. Rescue officials said the man had been working on the roof when a sudden gust of wind blew the piece of panel toward him.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.