Tag: South Korea

President Yoon Orders Interior Minister to Prepare for Typhoon Arrival as He Leaves for Overseas Trip

It appears that this typhoon is not going to impact South Korea as much as previously expected, but if it does veer and hit the country, President Yoon is setting himself up for criticism if he is not here when a natural disaster hits:

President Yoon Suk-yeol, center, shakes hands with Minister of the Interior and Safety Lee Sang-min at Seoul Airport in Seongnam, Gyeonggi Province, before boarding the presidential jet to leave for the U.K., Sunday. First lady Kim Keon-hee is on the right. Yonhap

After forming in the ocean off the Philippines on Sept. 13, Nanmadol developed into a typhoon the following day and started moving north with a “weak” intensity and wind speeds of between 17 m/s and 24 m/s. The intensity grew to very strong on Sunday morning.

President Yoon Suk-yeol told his officials to remain wary of Nanmadol as he stepped on the presidential jet Sunday morning to leave for the U.K., his first stop on a weeklong official trip. 

Yoon instructed Interior Minister Lee Sang-min to prepare the country for the approaching typhoon, according to Lee Jae-myeong, the vice-spokesperson of the presidential office.

With much of the country’s essential industrial infrastructure still recovering from the impact of Hinnamnor, including a POSCO steel plant in North Gyeongsang Province, the president ordered the interior minister to “thoroughly prepare for the typhoon at all costs as the country has been under threats from back-to-back natural disasters.”

Korea Times

You can read more at the link.

Tweet of the Day: Notice Anything?

https://twitter.com/Josh_Merfeld/status/1569132358812696576

Conservative Group Clashes with Anti-Japanese Activists in Seoul

You would think all these people would have something better to do then make a fool of themselves over this issue:

A group of conservative activists and an anti-Japanese group opposing wartime sex slaves clash at a rally held near the Statue of Peace in central Seoul on Sept. 12, 2022. (Yonhap)

 Scuffles plagued the site of a statue of a girl symbolizing victims of Japan’s wartime sexual slavery Sunday night as members of a right-wing organization raided the site and clashed with anti-Japanese activists guarding the statue.

The four-hour melee happened as members of New Freedom Solidarity held a surprise rally near the statue in central Seoul around 10 p.m. Sunday, demanding the breakup of a civic organization established to help victims of the sexual enslavement of Korean women during Japan’s 1910-45 colonial rule.

Clashes continued past midnight as the leader of the right-wing organization attempted to force his way near the statue and anti-Japanese activists tried to keep him away. One protester was taken to the hospital for exhaustion.

An anti-Japanese activist was also taken into custody for pushing a police officer at the scene.

Although police separated the two sides with police lines, they continued to clash with loudspeakers and caused inconvenience to people nearby before the conservative group finally left the area at around 2:10 a.m. Monday.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

Korean Embassy Warns Travelers of COVID Testing Fraud in Vietnam

This is all the more reason why all the COVID testing at the airports should be stopped, to prevent testing fraud:

The Korean Embassy in Vietnam has stepped up efforts to prevent a coronavirus testing-related scam, with such fraud cases on the rise targeting Korean tourists in the Southeast Asian country when they return to Korea.

According to the embassy and the Korean foreign ministry, Wednesday, two embassy staffers visited the office of Vietjet Air in Hanoi two days earlier and took issue with the budget airline’s rejection of Korean travelers’ negative COVID-19 test results, which left them exposed to rapid antigen test fraud. Vietjet Air is a Vietnamese low-cost carrier (LCC), based in the capital city of Hanoi. (………)

The embassy’s complaints came as more Korean travelers in Vietnam have fallen victim to the rapid testing scam, sparking an outcry among them and raising the need for the Korean government to step in. 

Until Sept. 2, all inbound travelers to Korea had to hand in negative PCR test results conducted within 48 hours or from rapid antigen tests within 24 hours preceding their departure for the country, but this rule has been lifted amid the overall recent downward trend in the number of daily new cases. However, a mandate to take a PCR test within one day after arrival in Korea remains unchanged. 

According to the embassy, Vietjet frequently rejected Korean passengers’ negative test results, even if they were valid, and on-site brokers received a premium to give them an emergency last-minute test. 

Korea Times

You can read more at the link.

Seven People Die Trying to Save Cars in Flooded Parking Garage in Pohang

It is amazing how many people died trying to save cars that could have easily been repaired or fixed with insurance:

Rescue workers carry a survivor out of the flooded underground parking lot of an apartment building in Pohang, North Gyeongsang Province, southeastern South Korea, on Sept. 6, 2022, after nine residents went missing following the torrential rains caused by Typhoon Hinnamnor that hit the region. (Yonhap)

Nine people have been pulled from a flooded parking garage in the southeastern city of Pohang, two of them alive, with the seven others having died after being found in cardiac arrest, as the search continued for any remaining victims in the wake of Typhoon Hinnamnor.

All of them had been trapped in the underground parking lot at an apartment complex in Pohang, about 270 km southeast of Seoul, after going there to move their cars amid heavy downpours brought on by the typhoon.

Rescue workers searched the flooded garage and pulled the nine people out of the water.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

South Korea Continues to Calculate Damage and Death Caused by Typhoon Hinnamnor

I just don’t understand why people cannot just stay inside and wait until the storm passes. It seems every typhoon the casualty are caused by people not bunkering down inside:

This photo provided by a news reader shows an inundated river in the coastal city of Ulsan on Sept. 6, 2022.

Three people were found dead and eight others went missing in South Korea after Typhoon Hinnamnor passed by the southern part of the country Tuesday, authorities said.

Pohang city officials said seven people were reported to be out of contact after entering the inundated underground parking lot of an apartment building in the city at around 6:30 a.m. to remove their cars. 

Rescuers are currently carrying out an operation to drain the parking garage and find those missing. 

A 66-year-old woman who was unaccounted for after entering the underground parking garage of another apartment building in Pohang in the morning was found dead six hours later, the officials said.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

University Professor Alerts Korean Government to Japanese Weather Map Not Correctly Depicting Dokdo

You would think this professor would have better things to do than trolling Japanese websites looking for anything not labeling Dokdo correctly. What a sad life to lead:

The foreign ministry lodged a strong protest against Japan’s weather agency for labeling South Korea’s easternmost Dokdo islets as Japanese territory in maps depicting the path of Super Typhoon Hinnamnor. 

The ministry said on Monday in a statement that Dokdo islets are South Korean territory historically, geographically and by international law.

The ministry stressed that it will sternly respond to Japan’s unjust infringement upon South Korea’s territorial sovereignty, adding it asked the neighboring country to correct the mistake. 

Professor Seo Kyoung-duk at Sungshin Women’s University, first alerted the government and news outlets that Dokdo was labeled as Japanese territory on weather maps posted on the website of the Japan Meteorological Agency. 

KBS World News

You can read more at the link.

South Korea Sort of Does Away with Inbound COVID Testing for Travelers

Travelers to South Korea no longer need to present a negative COVID test to enter South Korea, but still have to take a test 24 hours after entry:

Inbound travelers from abroad stand in line to take coronavirus tests at a testing station at Incheon International Airport, west of Seoul, on Aug. 30, 2022. (Yonhap)

South Korea will lift its current pre-travel COVID-19 test requirement for inbound travelers later this week, an official said Wednesday, as the government believes the recent virus wave has passed its peak and the spread of omicron could slow down.

The new rule that will take effect Saturday came after a state infectious disease advisory committee recommended the government lift the mandatory pre-travel polymerase chain reaction (PCR) tests for inbound travelers. 

“All inbound travelers, whether our nationals or foreigners, arriving aboard a plane or ship will not need to hand in a negative PCR test starting midnight of Sept. 3,” Second Vice Health Minister Lee Ki-il said in a virus response meeting. (……)

Travelers, however, still need to take a PCR test within the first 24 hours of their arrival in South Korea, a “minimum measure” put in place to prevent the inflow and spread of any variant from overseas, the vice minister said.

Yonhap

You can read more at the link.

Poll Shows that Majority of South Koreans Not Concerned By North Korean Threats

The findings from this poll are easy to believe because from my experience as well, many South Koreans have just become numb to the North Korean threat:

A Hwasong-17 intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) is launched from Pyongyang International Airport on March 25. [YONHAP]
A Hwasong-17 intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) is launched from Pyongyang International Airport on March 25. [YONHAP]

Almost thirty years, more than a hundred missile launches and six nuclear weapons tests later, Pyongyang’s state media still issues apocalyptic threats to “completely annihilate” Seoul — but South Koreans appear to tune them out, while South Korean military officials respond to every North Korean provocation with the now predictable refrain: “Our military maintains a constant state of readiness.”  
   
So are South Koreans genuinely not concerned about North Korea — and are they confident they will be protected should the unthinkable happen?  
   
   
Do South Koreans even think about North Korea?   
   
On the surface, South Koreans appear less concerned about what goes on north of the DMZ and more preoccupied with domestic issues, like those surrounding real estate policy and the economy.  
   
Despite a flurry of North Korean missile tests in the lead-up to the March presidential election, two out of three South Koreans surveyed in a Feb. 3-4 poll of 1,006 adults by the Korea Society Opinion Institute (KSOI) and the Kukmin Ilbo newspaper said the North Korean missile launches over the previous month would not influence their choice for the country’s next president.  
   
“Who has time to worry about North Korea? I think we’re all just busy trying to make ends meet,” said Lee Young-sun, a 50-year-old restaurant chef, when asked about how often she thinks about North Korea.  
   
Lee, who described herself as politically apathetic, said, “If I have to pick one issue that I thought about during the election, it would be unemployment and real estate prices.”  
   
Kim Dong-min, a 28-year-old IT worker, described a similar set of priorities. “I was worried mostly about economic policy during the lead-up to the presidential elections,” he said, adding that “things have been tough for millennials.” 

Joong Ang Ilbo

You can read more at the link.

Korean President Calls Economic Conditions “Severe” as Won Continues to Drop Against the Dollar

Economic conditions in Korea may not be good, but it good for U.S. troops stationed there that are getting a great exchange rate against the won:

Electronic display boards at Hana Bank in central Seoul show Tuesday markets. [NEWS1]
Electronic display boards at Hana Bank in central Seoul show Tuesday markets. [NEWS1]

Current economic conditions are “severe,” the presidential office said Tuesday, as the Finance Ministry warned speculators not to pile into the won trade, with the currency now at levels not seen in more than 13 years.  
   
“Internal and external economic conditions, like the weak won and the growing trade deficit, are severe,” presidential spokesperson Kim Eun-hye said on Tuesday.  
   
Earlier that day, President Yoon Suk-yeol said he will address the economic risks in an emergency meeting and make sure the falling won “does not impose negative impacts on our market.”

The won broke 1,340 to the dollar for the first time in 13 years and four months on Monday. It continued to fall Tuesday, hitting 1,346.60 won intraday. The currency has declined more than 10 percent this year.  
   
A declining won puts Korea in a tough situation as households are weighed down by debt and being squeezed by inflation. Raising rates would held stabilize the currency but threaten the housing market, while inflation could remain high if rates are increased too slowly.  
   
The brewing economic crisis is as much a test for the president, who is already battling a low approval rating and has few tools at his disposal, as it is for the central bank. 

Joong Ang Ilbo

You can read more at the link, but the current economic problems is probably going to only further drop President Yoon’s approval ratings.