Articles by Suk Gee-hyun
Suk Gee-hyun
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Korea grapples with health risks, damage from city pigeons
Throughout history, pigeons and doves have been symbols of love and peace and used as messengers over long distances. The birds have now turned into an urban headache posing health risks, damaging property and spoiling the landscape. They are often branded as “flying rats” and “chickgeons” (referring to overweight birds). The Ministry of Environment designated city pigeons as harmful wildlife in 2009 for carrying pathogenic disease germs and defacing buildings and cultural assets with excreta.Bu
National Dec. 2, 2013
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Court orders Ssangyong labor to compensate firm, police
A lower court on Friday ordered unionized workers at Ssangyong Motors to compensate the company and the police for inflicting financial loss and casualties during a 77-day strike staged in 2009.The Suwon District Court said it has ordered senior members of the union and umbrella union groups who led the protest to pay 3.3 billion won ($3.1 million) and 1.3 billion won to the carmaker and the police, respectively, saying their actions were “violent, illegal and unjustified.” In the 2009 strike, t
Social Affairs Nov. 29, 2013
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KECO to tap into green market in Africa
The state-run Korea Environment Corp. is to sign a memorandum of understanding on Friday with Water Sanitation for Africa, in an effort to help improve access to safe water, hygiene and sanitation in the region, company officials said Wednesday.The agreement, which will be made in Abidjan, Cte d’Ivoire, focuses on cooperation in making environment-friendly policies, infrastructure and welfare services.Water and sanitation levels have been typically poor in Sub-Saharan Africa, with only 31 percen
National Nov. 21, 2013
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Boar war: Korea struggles to deal with wild pigs
This is something you don’t see everyday in the city: four feral boars on a rampage. It all happened in the morning of Nov. 8, around apartment buildings, a school playground and even a department store. The bizarre sight would surely have made a great anecdote for the witnesses, but the damage and risk that the boars make every year have reached an alarming level, data show.According to a Ministry of Environment report, 381 sightings of feral boars were reported in downtown Seoul between 2011 a
National Nov. 20, 2013
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Tense week ahead for climate talks
WARSAW (AP) ― U.N. climate talks head into a tense final week Monday after the diplomatic effort to reduce global warming gases was hit by a series of setbacks, including Japan’s decision to ditch its voluntary emissions target.The two-decade-old negotiations have so far failed to achieve their goal of slashing emissions of CO2 and other greenhouse gases that scientists say are warming the planet. They don’t seem to be getting any closer after a tumultuous first week at this year’s session in Wa
Nov. 18, 2013
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Cram school operators, brokers indicted over SAT leaks
The prosecution has indicted 21 cram school operators, tutors and brokers without detention for leaking U.S. Scholastic Aptitude Test materials.Seoul Central District Prosecutors’ Office said Sunday that 14 hagwon operators and tutors, and eight brokers were questioned for illegally collecting and selling SAT questions, throwing the spotlight back on a string of cheating scandals from earlier this year. One of those questioned belongs to the military and was referred to the military prosecution.
Social Affairs Nov. 17, 2013
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Koreans rush to help Philippines typhoon victims
Efforts to provide aid and monetary support to the Philippines are accelerating in Korea, with corporations, religious groups and high-profile influencers offering their support after Typhoon Haiyan struck earlier this month.The Seoul Metropolitan Office of Education is to hold a five-day “coin-collecting” campaign on Monday to help the survivors of the typhoon-ravaged Philippines, where the death toll continues to rise and relief supplies are running low.Seoul City donated $200,000 to the count
Social Affairs Nov. 17, 2013
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Government to help create 16,500 part-time jobs in public sector
The government plans to encourage the creation of about 16,500 part-time jobs in the public sector by 2017 as part of efforts to attain its goal of a 70 percent employment rate, Employment and Labor Minister Phang Ha-nam said at an economic ministerial meeting Wednesday.To further stimulate the job market, the government will encourage the private sector to increase job opportunities through flexible employment by offering tax incentives, wage subsidies of up to 800,000 won ($745) and full socia
Politics Nov. 13, 2013
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Court suspends disbandment of biggest teachers’ union
The Seoul Administrative Court on Wednesday temporarily invalidated the government’s decision to deregister the country’s largest teachers’ union last month.The Korean Teachers and Education Workers’ Union on Oct 24 filed a lawsuit and preliminary injunction against the Education Ministry’s recent move to deprive it of legal status as a union for refusing a government order to exclude dismissed teachers from its membership.The court accepted the injunction request, allowing the progressive union
Social Affairs Nov. 13, 2013
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Temp workers at schools to go on strike
Some 50,000 temporary and contract school workers across the country excluding Seoul are set to go on a strike Wednesday, demanding a pay raise, more benefits and better job security.The union of non-regular employees working for meal services, English classes, administration assistance and extracurricular activities said its members approved a walkout in recent votes.Its chapter in Seoul will not join the action as they reached an agreement with the education authorities in July.The union has s
Social Affairs Nov. 10, 2013
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Korea, China, Japan to jointly study fine pollutants
South Korea, China and Japan have agreed to start joint research on ultrafine pollutants as part of a broad scientific cooperation to fight environmental problems.The chiefs of those three countries’ state-run environmental scientific institutes also agreed to add environmental disasters to the list of their ongoing joint projects, including climate change, yellow dust, harmful chemicals and water pollution. The 10th annual meeting was held in Nanjing, China, from Tuesday to Friday, with the par
National Nov. 10, 2013
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Korea on alert over Chinese dust
Health authorities are on alert over recently heightened levels of fine particles in the air, which can cause respiratory problems and other irritations in the eye, nose and throat. About 30 times smaller than a human hair, ultrafine particles measure less than 2.5 micrometers across and are carried by the wind, much of them coming from cities in northern China, including Harbin and Beijing. Recent studies showed they can directly enter the bronchial tubes and interfere with the gas exchange in
Technology Nov. 7, 2013
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KECO wins award for excellence in sustainable development
The state-run Korea Environment Corp. won the International Green Apple Environment Award for the second consecutive year, KECO officials said Wednesday. The company was announced as the bronze award winner in Asia by the London-based Green Organization, with an real-time online system that monitors air pollutants from smokestacks at industrial sites. Named CleanSYS, the program collects data from installations on smokestacks and sends it to its control center. The corporation launched the syste
Social Affairs Nov. 6, 2013
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Korea’s biggest ecological park to open to public next spring
South Korea’s largest ecological center officially launched last month to give a boost to ecological studies and enhance public awareness of environmental problems, according to officials from the Ministry of Environment.The National Institute of Ecology finally unveiled the long-awaited center named Ecorium, which occupies almost 1 square kilometer in Seocheon, a small town in South Chungcheong Province. Having been in temporary operation since March, inviting around 15,760 visitors, it will op
National Nov. 4, 2013
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Working moms’ conditions worsening: poll
About 73 percent of working mothers in Korea are experiencing difficulty in balancing career and family despite government efforts to support women in the workplace, a poll showed Monday.According to a survey of 1,000 women in their 30s and 40s conducted by the Women’s Intercultural Network, the Misery Index for working moms reached 3.33 points on a scale of zero to five, up 0.29 points from last year. A reading closer to 5 indicates higher levels of stress. The organization analyzed the data by
Social Affairs Oct. 29, 2013
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