#washingtonpost.com. × South Korea admits to adoption fraud and babies taken without consent. The findings of a government probe confirm what many adoptees attested to for years: Babies were sent abroad for profit, often with falsified backstories.
#Mar.27.2025 ×
#washingtonpost.com. × Deadly wildfires sweep across South Korea’s southeast, in photos and videos. At least four people have been killed in the blazes, which have burned more than 36,000 acres and threaten population centers home to more than 200,000 people.
#Mar.25.2025 ×
#washingtonpost.com. × South Korea’s prime minister is reinstated, still no word on president. Prime Minister Han Duck-soo is back as acting president, but the Constitutional Court has still not given a date for its ruling on the impeachment of Yoon Suk Yeol.
#Mar.24.2025 ×
#washingtonpost.com. × U.S. allies in Asia still hope to avoid steel and aluminum tariffs. The Trump administration’s 25 percent tariffs on steel and aluminum imports are now in effect but South Korea, Japan and Australia remain hopeful of exemptions.
#Mar.12.2025 ×
#washingtonpost.com. × South Korea’s defiant president is freed from jail ahead of court ruling. Amid rival mass rallies in Seoul, Yoon Suk Yeol is freed from detention as he faces trial on insurrection charges over his short-lived imposition of martial law.
#Mar.08.2025 ×
#washingtonpost.com. × South Korean jets mistakenly bomb village, injuring 15. Two KF-16 fighter jets dropped eight bombs in a rural area near the North Korean border. Footage showed plumes of smoke and damaged trucks, houses and a church.
#Mar.06.2025 ×
Filter: #washingtonpost.com. × #Mar.27.2025 ×
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