Articles by Yoon Min-sik
Yoon Min-sik
minsikyoon@heraldcorp.com-
S. Korea to release criminal suspects' identities starting Jan. 25
A law on releasing the identities of criminal suspects will take effect on Jan. 25, allowing police to release a recent photo, the name and age of individuals charged with a range of crimes, such as sexual violence against minors, certain drug crimes, arson, armed revolt and being part of an organized crime ring. In October 2023, the National Assembly passed the so-called "mug shot law," which provides legal grounds for authorities to release to the public the identities of criminal su
Social Affairs Jan. 2, 2024
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Singer-turned-actor Lee Na-eun denies dating soccer star Lee Kang-in
South Korean actor Lee Na-eun, who was formerly part of girl group April, denied rumors that she is in a romantic relationship with soccer player Lee Kang-in on Tuesday. Lee's agency, Namoo Actors, said that she and the Paris Saint-Germain player "just know each other," responding to earlier reports the two are dating. The agency said that the two had had a meeting, but it was merely for the actor to receive tickets to a game. Lee Kang-in's representatives did not comment. Ea
People Jan. 2, 2024
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Opposition leader stabbing shows politicians still vulnerable to physical attack
Tuesday's stabbing of Lee Jae-myung, the leader of the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea, showed that South Korea's politicians remain vulnerable to physical attacks despite several high-profile cases in the recent past. Lee, 59, had been visiting the site of the new airport in Busan and was speaking to members of the media when an unidentified man approached him asking for an autograph before lunging to stab him in the neck, undetected and undeterred by anyone. Lee is one of t
Politics Jan. 2, 2024
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American man taken into custody for inflicting injury with knife
South Korean police on Tuesday said they have apprehended a US national in his 40s on suspicion of using a knife to injure a local man. The suspect, whose identity was withheld, is believed to have attacked the victim in his 20s in an alley in Seogyo-dong, Mapo-gu, western Seoul at 7:22 p.m. on Monday. He approached the victim's car and knocked on the window, and attacked the victim when he came out. The victim sustained non-critical injuries, and was treated at a nearby hospital. The polic
Social Affairs Jan. 2, 2024
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Lee Jae-myung attacked during Busan visit
Lee Jae-myung, the leader of the main opposition Democratic Party of Korea, was attacked by an unidentified person Tuesday during his visit to Busan. He had been visiting the site of a new airport in Gadeok-do, an island off the coast of the port city, when the attack occurred. The attacker was apprehended at the scene. Lee sustained an injury to his neck and has received emergency treatment, but the severity of the injury remains unclear. More to follow.
Social Affairs Jan. 2, 2024
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Young workers' happiness deteriorates with longer working hours: study
Young South Koreans generally tend to be less happy the longer they work, a report published by a state-run organization showed Monday. The amount of labor that employees aged 34 or younger are most satisfied with is between 15 and 40 hours a week, according to the report published in the journal of the Korea Labor Institute. Researcher Park Ju-sang, of the Korea Labour & Society Institute took the data from the Korean Employment Information Service and categorized South Korean employees age
Social Affairs Jan. 1, 2024
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1st baby born in 2024 is gift to couple who struggled through 12 years of infertility
The first South Korean officially born in the New Year is a healthy, 3.15-kilogram boy, born to a couple who struggled to conceive for over a decade. Cha Gangnam Medical Center in Seoul said Monday that the baby boy was born exactly at midnight of the year 2024, making him the first person to be born in the country in the new year. The boy was conceived through in vitro fertilization to 44-year-old Lee Ju-hong and 38-year-old Im A-yeon. "(Our baby's birth) is even more special becaus
People Jan. 1, 2024
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3 in 10 new schools don't have enough students: report
As South Korea's school age population continues to drop, 31.3 percent of recently built schools are suffering from a student shortage, a state-issued report showed Monday. The Korea Educational Development Institute conducted a survey on the number of students attending 214 elementary, middle and high schools across the country that had been built between 2018 and 2020, based on annual reports by the Ministry of Education. The schools with student numbers below 70 percent of the figure i
Social Affairs Jan. 1, 2024
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Dating apps in Korea overflowing with men, but women use them more: data
Roughly 80 percent of major dating app users in South Korea are men, but women use the services for nearly twice as long as their male counterpart, a report showed Sunday. The most popular dating app here was Tinder, where 84.2 percent of the users were men, according to local consumer data analysis service Wise App. Among other popular applications, Wippy users were 78.8 percent men, Glam was 86.1 percent men, and 90.3 percent of the people on Yangting were male. Tinder had the most number of u
Social Affairs Jan. 1, 2024
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98% of teens, 20-somethings use streaming subscription services: report
Almost every South Korean in their teens or 20s is using some form of over-the-top media service, a report by the Korea Communications Commission showed Thursday. About 97.8 percent of all 20-somethings and 97.6 percent of teenagers aged 13 and above were using subscription-based streaming services, the highest out of all age groups. Overall, 77 percent of the general population were using OTT services, up five percent from the year before. The state-run organization conducted a survey on 7,055
Television Dec. 31, 2023
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Cancer survival rate rises, but cancer patients at all-time high
Roughly seven out of 10 cancer patients in South Korea survive at least five years after cancer is detected, but the number of new cancer patients is at an all-time high according to a state report released Thursday. The five-year relative survival rate for people diagnosed with cancer between 2017 and 2021 was 72.1 percent, according to the joint report by the Ministry of Health and Welfare and Korea Central Cancer Registry. It increased from 65.5 percent in 2016, and marked a significant incre
Social Affairs Dec. 31, 2023
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Who'll be 'lucky' in the new year? Who has to watch out?
Chinese zodiac is a system of belief that assigns an animal to each year and assumes one's fate is closely linked to this classification. As such, there are "lucky" and "unlucky" years for each person. In the year 2024, which is the year of the blue dragon, those born in the year of the monkey are expected to be lucky. The dragon and the monkey are part of the 12 animals of the Chinese zodiac system, in the order of: rat, ox, tiger, rabbit, dragon, snake, horse, goat, mo
Culture Dec. 30, 2023
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Man kills son, found dead soon after
A South Korean man killed his son and was later found dead, local police said Thursday. According to Ulju Police Station in Ulsan, the man in his 40s gravely injured his 20-something son with a weapon at 4:32 p.m. on Wednesday on the streets and quickly fled the scene. The victim received medical treatment at a nearby hospital, but died less than an hour later at 5:21 p.m. that day. Police tracked down the culprit and found him dead inside a car parked about 5 kilometers from the crime scene. In
Social Affairs Dec. 28, 2023
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Lee Sun-kyun's alleged blackmailer taken into custody
A woman suspected of blackmailing actor Lee Sun-kyun was taken into custody by local police late Wednesday, a few hours after the actor was found dead in an apparent suicide. According to reports, Incheon Metropolitan Police Agency apprehended the suspect in her 20s after she failed to appear at Incheon District Court Tuesday for a scheduled substantive review of her arrest warrant. In Korea, substantive review of an arrest warrant is a process by which an individual the police seeks to arrest m
Social Affairs Dec. 28, 2023
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Leader behind Gyeongbokgung graffiti attack also targeted subways: police
A person who paid two teenagers to vandalize the walls of Gyeongbokgung had also ordered another teen to graffiti subway stations in Daegu, a police investigation found Wednesday. The individual identified as "team leader Lee," thought to have paid a 17-year-old male surnamed Im and 16-year-old female to graffiti the palace walls with the web addresses to illegal video streaming platforms, is also believed to have contacted another teen in Daegu on Dec. 18 for a similar request. Lee to
Social Affairs Dec. 27, 2023
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