Articles by Park Han-na
Park Han-na
hnpark@heraldcorp.com-
National Assembly speaker suggests simultaneous 2022 elections
National Assembly Speaker Park Byeong-seug on Wednesday suggested holding the presidential election and local elections simultaneous in 2022. “I hope that we can conclude this issue next year as the two elections will be held three months apart in the first half of 2022, which could lead to quite a bit of waste of national resources,” he said during a press conference held to mark his 100-day anniversary in office. He urged lawmakers to deal with bills related to COVID-19 and o
Politics Sept. 16, 2020
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Korea in talks to secure vaccines for 60% of population
The government announced Tuesday that it had decided to make an upfront payment worth 172 billion won ($146 million) as part of its plan to secure COVID-19 vaccines to administer to 30 million people, or roughly 60 percent of the total population. The country will take a two-track approach. For 20 million doses for 10 million people, the government will look to the COVAX Facility, the global vaccine initiative in which South Korea participates along with more than 150 other countries. It a
Social Affairs Sept. 15, 2020
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Child porn offenders could be sentenced to 29 years in jail
The country’s highest court decided to strengthen sentencing guidelines for digital sex crimes Tuesday, enabling producers of child pornography to be punished by up to 29 years in prison. The decision from the Supreme Court’s sentencing commission came following public outcry over lenient punishments handed down to offenders involved in child pornography here, compared to those in other countries. The new guidelines recommend judges sentence people convicted of producing child
Social Affairs Sept. 15, 2020
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Elementary students to learn math through AI program
The Ministry of Education said Sunday it would provide an artificial intelligence-based mathematics program to elementary schools across the country, starting Monday. This marks the first time the country will incorporate AI technology in school curriculum. The AI-base program which is designed for the first and second grade students at elementary schools features a system that recommends educational content that matches the learning level of each student after analyzing their ability to perf
Social Affairs Sept. 13, 2020
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Self-harm among Koreans rose 36% in H1
The number of people who deliberately harmed themselves surged nearly 36 percent in the first half of 2020 compared to a year ago, amid a growing concern that the COVID-19 pandemic is aggravating psychological distress here. The number of medical treatments conducted on patients involved with intentional self-harm stood at 1,076 cases in the first six months of this year, up 35.9 percent, from 792 in 2019, according to data the Health Insurance Review & Assessment Service submitted to Rep.
Social Affairs Sept. 13, 2020
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[Newsmaker] Opposition parties demand justice minister's exit
The controversy over allegations that Justice Minister Choo Mi-ae pulled strings to obtain special treatment for her son during his compulsory military service years ago intensified Thursday, leading prosecutors to expand their investigation and inviting demands for her resignation from opposition parties. The Defense Ministry on Thursday dismissed speculation that the minister’s son, 26, surnamed Seo, may have used his mother’s influence as a political bigwig and breached militar
Social Affairs Sept. 10, 2020
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Boycotting med students left out of exams
The Health Ministry is giving the cold shoulder to medical students who boycotted the annual state licensing exam to protest the government’s medical reform plans, saying it would be unfair to give them another chance to take the test. “It is not an easy issue for the government to decide if consent from the public is not preceded,” Sohn Young-rae, a spokesperson for the Ministry of Health and Welfare, said in a briefing. Out of some 3,172 medical students who were eligi
Social Affairs Sept. 9, 2020
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PM warns National Foundation Day protestors
Prime Minister Chung Sye-kyun lashed out at conservative groups for planning to hold rallies on National Foundation Day early next month, warning that anyone caught hindering virus containment efforts will face stern punishment. “We will exercise governmental authority given by the public without hesitation against activities that hamper antivirus measures and threaten the safety of communities,” Chung said Wednesday during a government COVID-19 response meeting. Calling the p
Social Affairs Sept. 9, 2020
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[News Focus] Seoul faces virus compensation challenge
The government has repeatedly warned that it would take stern action against the “bad apples” that impede efforts to combat the virus, such as requesting reimbursement for all the medical treatment and quarantine costs it has incurred. But claiming damages from violators of anti-virus rules is far more complex and daunting than they thought, according to local government officials and experts. “The government will thoroughly strengthen crackdowns and inspections until the act
Social Affairs Sept. 8, 2020
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South Korea gears up for flu season, Chuseok in COVID-19 fight
The government has expanded its flu vaccination program to help protect vulnerable people and preempt the chaos expected from the arrival of a flu season amid the COVID-19 pandemic. According to Jung Eun-kyeong, director of South Korea’s Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the government will expand free vaccine eligibility to 19 million people, or 37 percent of the total population, from 13.8 million people ahead of flu season. The vaccination campaign will start Tuesday for
Social Affairs Sept. 7, 2020
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South Korea reports 119 more cases of new coronavirus
New daily cases of the novel coronavirus in South Korea have increased by 119, bringing the total caseload to 21,296, according to the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on Monday. It is the fifth day in a row that the daily tally remained below 200. The death toll rose by two to 336. The fatality rate stands at 1.58 percent. Health Minister Park Neung-hoo urged the public to comply with the government’s strengthened Level 2 social distancing system so that the measure,
Social Affairs Sept. 7, 2020
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Doctors reach deals with ruling party, ministry to reconsider medical reform
A doctors’ association reached two separate agreements with the government and the ruling Democratic Party on Friday to restart their talks on a medical reform plan with more input from physicians when the COVID-19 pandemic settles down. Following an hours-long discussion that began Thursday, Rep. Han Jung-ae, chief policymaker of the Democratic Party and Choi Dae-zip, head of the Korean Medical Association singed a five-point agreement at 10 a.m. Under the agreement, they will br
Social Affairs Sept. 4, 2020
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Another COVID-19 case shuts down National Assembly
The National Assembly was forced to shut down Thursday and scores of big wig politicans from both sides of the aisle went back home after an official from the main opposition party tested positive for COVID-19. The positive case involves a secretary of Rep. Lee Jong-bae of the People Power Party, who underwent testing on Wednesday after having symptoms while working at his office at the parliament building in Yeouido, Seoul. Rep. Lee is the party’s chief policymaker. The PPP cancel
Social Affairs Sept. 3, 2020
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Highest court rules in favor of teachers union on legal status
The Supreme Court said Thursday the government’s 2013 decision that outlawed a left-leaning teachers union was illegitimate, overturning earlier lower court judgments in a move that could help the group to win back its status as a legal trade union. The ruling was a dramatic turn of events in a nearly seven-year feud between the Korean Teachers and Education Workers’ Union and the Labor Ministry, which has accused the group of infringing on the labor law by having nine dismissed t
Social Affairs Sept. 3, 2020
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Far-right pastor claims COVID-19 outbreak a fraud
As soon as he had recovered from COVID-19 on Wednesday, Jun Kwang-hoon, who leads the Seoul-based Presbyterian church that has emerged as the country’s second-biggest virus cluster, called the government’s antivirus measures a “fraud” designed to destroy his church. The far-right pastor repeated his claim that President Moon Jae-in and his administration were oppressing him for holding anti-government rallies, at a press conference held in front of his Sarang Jeil Chu
Social Affairs Sept. 2, 2020
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