5 years ago I started to learn Korean. All by myself while still living in Portugal and having a full time job. The reason: I was really, really curious to see how my 2 books translated in Korean are actually sounding. This intention evolved over the next few years in one of the most interesting (if not the MOST interesting) times of my life.
Let’s take things slowly.
Switching Events
To make a potentially long story short, after learning Hangul for about 1 year, I decided to travel to Korea to get my level 1 Korean certification, called TOPIK. I booked a hotel room, an airplane ticket, and one sunny May morning, I just went there. I put aside about 2 weeks to adjust to the time difference and overall local conditions. A couple of days after my arrival, I went to visit the exam location and checked the lists, to see if my name was there. It was, so all was good.
Feeling encouraged, I stepped a little bit out of my comfort zone and went to try some local Korean meetups. After one or two, I stumbled upon a very interesting one, which was somehow related to an upcoming hackathon. The problem? That hackathon was on the same day as my exam.
Still, I wanted to see what the whole event was about, so I attended the meetup. It turned out that it was part of a longer series of 3 meetups, where people interested in the hackathon can get to know each other, and start team formation. On a sudden impulse, I decided to participate and started to form my team.
The Actual Event
After the next 2 team formation events, I was registered to the hackathon, with a team of 3 (not much, but also not too little) and I was 100% out of the TOPIK exam. My initial rationale was that a TOPIK exam can also be taken in the fall – TOPIK exams are held twice a year – whereas that hackathon seemed to be a one off. Eventually, I ditched the TOPIK exam entirely.
The hackathon – named Glitch, for reasons not very clear to me – was not in Seoul, but in Incheon, about 40 minutes by train, and it was supposed to last an entire weekend. I took the train one rainy morning and met my other 2 team members there. Somehow, during the onboarding hours, a 4th member was added to the team. I was the only coder, the rest of the team was mainly design, social media or business.
The location was in the Hana financial town, a very big area containing event rooms, catering areas and even rooms to spend the night (the hackathon was supposed to last 2 days). Just going around every part of the location would take about 1 hour. And the total number of participants was 400. I was the only foreigner.
The hackathon started around 9 PM. The other members of the team, all Korean, started to mingle around, while I decided to stay at my desk and keep hacking. The project that I was competing with was a small game called Flippando. The night that followed, as well as most of the next day, I had little contact with the members of my team. But the coding was going quite well, so nothing to worry about.
With a few hours before the end, I met my team members again, and we decided on a small presentation strategy. They drafted a keynote, I made a small demo, and, when the time came to present in front of the jury, we were ready. The presentation was held in English, and, as far as I could tell, it went quite ok.
The Grand Finale
After the presentation, there was a 4-hour judging interval. As I was walking around the corridors, trying to rest my eyes a little bit, one of the jury members approached me and told me we won a track prize already, and we were in the grand finale. The top 10 projects winning individual tracks were also competing for the grand finale.
Very excited, I called my team members, and told them we won the Polygon track. In less than 1 minute, everybody gathered and they started to work frantically on the grand finale presentation.
Everybody gathered in the big event room and we waited for our turn. I went on the stage, and gave another presentation, still in English. It also went quite ok. In about 10 minutes, the judges deliberated and the big winner was announced. It wasn’t us, but we still kept the big Polygon number one prize.
After pictures and a little bit of back and forth, everybody got on the train and we got back in Seoul.
The Takeaways
Going over what I wrote above, it looks almost like news in a newspaper. It doesn’t capture the emotion and the happiness we experienced when we learned that we won. But maybe it’s better like this. It’s also quite aligned with the Asian, more composed way to behave. And it has just enough details, not too much, not too little.
Now, to honor the title, how do you actually win a hackathon in South Korea?
Well, in no particular order:
make sure you attend one, first. It may sound dumb, but remember I had to take a big decision, to ditch the TOPIK exam for this. In the end, the game became relatively popular, and it also generated a little bit of revenue, significantly more than the hackathon prize
make sure you give your best. I could have just linger around, like many of the other contestants, who treated the event more like a networking opportunity, rather than a contest. But I didn’t. I stayed there and coded for around 30 hours.
practice your presentation skills. Coding is important, but what got the attention of the jury was the clean, but compelling presentation I crafted with my team members
be lucky. I know, I know, but that’s the truth. At the end of the day, you really need a bit of luck. There’s no bulletproof strategy for winning a hackathon. I learned that the hard way, after participating in a few others – without winning anything, of course.
Ahn Sung-ki, one of South Korean cinema’s biggest stars whose prolific 60-year career and positive, gentle public image earned him the nickname “The Nation’s Actor,” died Monday. He was 74.The death of Ahn, who had been had blood cancer for years, was announced by his agency, the Artist Company, and the Seoul-based Soonchunhyang University Hospital.”We feel deep sorrow at the sudden, sad news, pray for the eternal rest of the deceased and offer our heartfelt condolences to his bereaved family members,” the Artist Company said in a statement. Born to a filmmaker in the southeastern city of Daegu in 1952, Ahn made his debut as a child actor in the movie “The Twilight Train” in 1957. He subsequently appeared in about 70 movies as a child actor before he left the film industry to live an ordinary life. In 1970, Ahn entered Seoul’s Hankuk University of Foreign Studies as a Vietnamese major. Ahn said he graduated with top honors but failed to land jobs at big companies, who likely saw his Vietnamese major largely useless after a communist victory in the Vietnam War in 1975.After spending a few years unemployed, Ahn returned to the film industry in 1977 believing he could still excel in acting. In 1980, he rose to fame for his lead role in Lee Jang-ho’s “Good, Windy Days,” a hit coming-of-age movie about the struggle of working-class men from rural areas during the country’s rapid rise. Ahn won the best new actor award in the prestigious Grand Bell Awards, the Korean version of the Academy Awards.He later starred in a series of highly successful and critically acclaimed movies, sweeping best actor awards and becoming arguably the country’s most popular actor in much of the 1980-90s.Some of his memorable roles included a Buddhist monk in 1981’s “Mandara,” a beggar in 1984’s “Whale Hunting,” a Vietnam War veteran-turned-novelist in 1992’s “White Badge,” a corrupt police officer in 1993’s “Two Cops,” a murderer in 1999’s “No Where To Hide,” a special forces trainer in 2003’s “Silmido” and a devoted celebrity manager in 2006’s “Radio Star.”Ahn had collected dozens of trophies in major movie awards in South Korea, including winning the Grand Bell Awards for best actor five times, an achievement no other South Korean actors have matched yet. Ahn built up an image as a humble, trustworthy and family-oriented celebrity who avoided major scandals and maintained a quiet, stable personal life. Past public surveys chose Ahn as South Korea’s most beloved actor and deserving of the nickname “The Nation’s Actor.” Ahn said he earlier felt confined with his “The Nation’s Actor” labeling but eventually thought that led him down the right path. In recent years, local media has given other stars similar honorable nicknames, but Ahn was apparently the first South Korean actor who was dubbed as “The Nation’s Actor.” “I felt I should do something that could match that title. But I think that has eventually guided me on a good direction,” Ahn said in an interview with Yonhap news agency in 2023.In media interviews, Ahn couldn’t choose what his favorite movie was, but said that his role as a dedicated, hardworking manger for a washed-up rock singer played by Park Jung-hoon resembled himself in real life the most. Ahn was also known for his reluctance to do love scenes. He said said he was too shy to act romantic scenes and sometimes asked directors to skip steamy scenes if they were only meant to add spice to movies.”I don’t do well on acting like looking at someone who I don’t love with loving eyes and kissing really romantically. I feel shy and can’t express such emotions well,” Ahn said in an interview with the Shindonga magazine in 2007. “Simply, I’m clumsy on that. So I couldn’t star in such movies a lot. But ultimately, that was a right choice for me.”Ahn is survived by his wife and their two sons. A mourning station at a Seoul hospital was to run until Friday.
SEOUL, South Korea —
Ahn Sung-ki, one of South Korean cinema’s biggest stars whose prolific 60-year career and positive, gentle public image earned him the nickname “The Nation’s Actor,” died Monday. He was 74.
The death of Ahn, who had been had blood cancer for years, was announced by his agency, the Artist Company, and the Seoul-based Soonchunhyang University Hospital.
“We feel deep sorrow at the sudden, sad news, pray for the eternal rest of the deceased and offer our heartfelt condolences to his bereaved family members,” the Artist Company said in a statement.
Born to a filmmaker in the southeastern city of Daegu in 1952, Ahn made his debut as a child actor in the movie “The Twilight Train” in 1957. He subsequently appeared in about 70 movies as a child actor before he left the film industry to live an ordinary life.
In 1970, Ahn entered Seoul’s Hankuk University of Foreign Studies as a Vietnamese major. Ahn said he graduated with top honors but failed to land jobs at big companies, who likely saw his Vietnamese major largely useless after a communist victory in the Vietnam War in 1975.
After spending a few years unemployed, Ahn returned to the film industry in 1977 believing he could still excel in acting. In 1980, he rose to fame for his lead role in Lee Jang-ho’s “Good, Windy Days,” a hit coming-of-age movie about the struggle of working-class men from rural areas during the country’s rapid rise. Ahn won the best new actor award in the prestigious Grand Bell Awards, the Korean version of the Academy Awards.
He later starred in a series of highly successful and critically acclaimed movies, sweeping best actor awards and becoming arguably the country’s most popular actor in much of the 1980-90s.
Some of his memorable roles included a Buddhist monk in 1981’s “Mandara,” a beggar in 1984’s “Whale Hunting,” a Vietnam War veteran-turned-novelist in 1992’s “White Badge,” a corrupt police officer in 1993’s “Two Cops,” a murderer in 1999’s “No Where To Hide,” a special forces trainer in 2003’s “Silmido” and a devoted celebrity manager in 2006’s “Radio Star.”
KIN CHEUNG
FILE – South Korean actor Ahn Sung-ki attends an event as part of the 11th Pusan International Film Festival in Busan, South Korea, Oct. 13, 2006.
Ahn had collected dozens of trophies in major movie awards in South Korea, including winning the Grand Bell Awards for best actor five times, an achievement no other South Korean actors have matched yet.
Ahn built up an image as a humble, trustworthy and family-oriented celebrity who avoided major scandals and maintained a quiet, stable personal life. Past public surveys chose Ahn as South Korea’s most beloved actor and deserving of the nickname “The Nation’s Actor.”
Ahn said he earlier felt confined with his “The Nation’s Actor” labeling but eventually thought that led him down the right path. In recent years, local media has given other stars similar honorable nicknames, but Ahn was apparently the first South Korean actor who was dubbed as “The Nation’s Actor.”
“I felt I should do something that could match that title. But I think that has eventually guided me on a good direction,” Ahn said in an interview with Yonhap news agency in 2023.
In media interviews, Ahn couldn’t choose what his favorite movie was, but said that his role as a dedicated, hardworking manger for a washed-up rock singer played by Park Jung-hoon resembled himself in real life the most.
Ahn was also known for his reluctance to do love scenes. He said said he was too shy to act romantic scenes and sometimes asked directors to skip steamy scenes if they were only meant to add spice to movies.
“I don’t do well on acting like looking at someone who I don’t love with loving eyes and kissing really romantically. I feel shy and can’t express such emotions well,” Ahn said in an interview with the Shindonga magazine in 2007. “Simply, I’m clumsy on that. So I couldn’t star in such movies a lot. But ultimately, that was a right choice for me.”
Ahn is survived by his wife and their two sons. A mourning station at a Seoul hospital was to run until Friday.
North Korea launched multiple ballistic missiles toward its eastern waters Sunday, according to South Korean officials. The launches took place just hours before South Korea’s president left for China for talks expected to cover North Korea’s nuclear program.
South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement it detected several ballistic missile launches from North Korea’s capital region around 7:50 a.m. It stated that the missiles flew approximately 560 miles and that South Korean and U.S. authorities were analyzing the details of the launches.
The U.S. Indo-Pacific Command, a branch of the U.S. Armed Forces operating in that region, stated that there was no “immediate threat to U.S. personnel or territory, or to our allies.”
“We are aware of the missile launches and are consulting closely with our allies and partners,” the command said in a statement. “Based on current assessments, this event does not pose an immediate threat to U.S. personnel or territory, or to our allies. The United States remains committed to the defense of the U.S. homeland and our allies in the region.”
Meanwhile, South Korea’s Defense Ministry noted the launches violated U.N. Security Council resolutions that ban any ballistic activities by North Korea. It urged North Korea to cease provocative actions immediately and respond to South Korea’s push to restart talks and restore peace on the Korean Peninsula.
Japanese Defense Minister Shinjiro Koizumi said that at least two missile launches by North Korea have been confirmed. “They are a serious problem, threatening the peace and security of our nation, the region and the world,” Koizumi told reporters.
In this photo provided by the North Korean government, its leader Kim Jong Un, front right, visits a major munitions factory at an undisclosed place in North Korea Saturday, Jan. 3, 2026.
Korean Central News Agency/Korea News Service via AP)
The launches were the latest weapons demonstration by North Korea in recent weeks. Experts say North Korea is aiming to show off or review its achievements in the defense sector ahead of its upcoming ruling party congress, the first of its kind in five years. Observers are watching the Workers Party congress to see whether North Korea will set a new policy on the U.S. and resume long-stalled talks between the two countries.
North Korea has been focusing on testing activities to enlarge its nuclear arsenal since its leader Kim Jong Un’s summitry with U.S. President Donald Trump fell apart in 2019. Kim has also boosted his diplomatic credentials by aligning with Russia over its war in Ukraine and tightening relations with China. Observers say Kim would believe his leverage has sharply increased to wrest concessions from Trump if they sit down for talks again.
North Korea hasn’t announced when it will hold the congress, but South Korea’s spy service said it will likely occur in January or February.
Sunday’s launches also came hours before South Korean President Lee Jae Myung departed for China for a summit with President Xi Jinping. During the four-day trip, Lee’s office said he would request China, North Korea’s major ally and biggest trading partner, to take “a constructive role” in efforts to promote peace on the Korean Peninsula.
South Korea and the U.S. have long asked China to exercise its influence on North Korea to persuade it to return to talks or give up its nuclear program. But there are questions on how big of a leverage China has on its socialist neighbor. China, together with Russia, has also repeatedly blocked the U.S. and others’ attempts to toughen economic sanctions on North Korea in recent years.
Later Sunday, South Korea convened an emergency national security council meeting to discuss the North Korean missile launches. The council reported details of the launches and unspecified South Korean steps to Lee, according to the presidential office.
The launches followed Saturday’s dramatic U.S. military operation that ousted Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro from power and brought him to the U.S. to face narco-terrorism conspiracy charges. It represented America’s most assertive action to achieve regime change in a country since the nation’s 2003 invasion of Iraq.
North Korea’s Foreign Ministry on Sunday slammed the U.S. operation, saying it again shows “the rogue and brutal nature of the U.S.” A ministry statement said it denounces the U.S. act as “the most serious form of encroachment of sovereignty.”
“Kim Jong Un may feel vindicated about his efforts to build a nuclear deterrent, as he likely did after Trump’s strikes on Iran,” said Leif-Eric Easley, professor of international studies at Ewha Womans University in Seoul. “However, leaders of hostile regimes will probably live with greater paranoia after seeing how quickly Maduro was extracted from his country to stand trial in the United States.”
The official Korean Central News Agency said Sunday Kim visited a weapons factory on Saturday to review multipurpose precision guided weapons produced there. KCNA cited Kim as ordering officials to expand the current production capacity by about 2.5 times.
Last Sunday, North Korea test-fired what it called long-range strategic cruise missiles. On Dec. 25, North Korea released photos showing apparent progress in the construction of its first nuclear-powered submarine.
SEOUL, Jan 4 (Reuters) – North Korea has denounced the U.S. strikes on Venezuela as “the most serious form of encroachment of sovereignty,” state news agency KCNA said on Sunday.
“The incident is another example that clearly confirms once again the rogue and brutal nature of the United States,” KCNA said, citing a spokesperson for North Korea’s Foreign Ministry.
The statement came after North Korea launched ballistic missiles earlier on Sunday, the day the leader of South Korea begins a state visit to China, Pyongyang’s chief ally.
Pyongyang said the current situation in Venezuela “caused a catastrophic consequence to ensuring the identity of the regional and international relations structure.”
(Reporting by Hyunjoo Jin; Editing by Hugh Lawson)
North Korea launched multiple ballistic missiles toward the sea Sunday, its neighbors said, just hours before South Korea’s president leaves for China for talks expected to cover North Korea’s nuclear program.South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement it detected several ballistic missile launches from North Korea’s capital region around 7:50 a.m. It said the missiles flew about 900 kilometers (560 miles) and that South Korea and U.S. authorities were analyzing details of the launches.Video above: Wildfires in South Korea destroyed an ancient Buddhist templeThe Joint Chiefs of Staff said that South Korea maintains a readiness to repel any provocations by North Korea and is closely exchanging information with the U.S. and Japan on the North’s missile launches.Japanese Defense Minister Shinjiro Koizumi said that at least two missile launches by North Korea have been confirmed. “They are a serious problem, threatening the peace and security of our nation, the region and the world,” Koizumi told reporters.North Korea ramps up weapons display ahead of political meetThe launches were the latest weapons demonstration by North Korea in recent weeks. Experts say North Korea is aiming to show off or review its achievements in the defense sector ahead of its upcoming ruling party congress, the first of its kind in five years. Observers are watching the Workers Party congress to see whether North Korea will set a new policy on the U.S. and respond to its calls to resume long-stalled talks.North Korea has been focusing on testing activities to enlarge its nuclear arsenal since its leader Kim Jong Un’s summitry with U.S. President Donald Trump fell apart in 2019. Kim has also boosted his diplomatic credentials by aligning with Russia over its war in Ukraine and tightening relations with China. Observers say Kim would believe his leverage has sharply increased to wrest concessions from Trump if they sit down for talks again.North Korea hasn’t announced when it will hold the congress, but South Korea’s spy service said it will likely occur in January or February.Launches comes before South Korean leader’s trip to ChinaSunday’s launches also came hours before South Korean President Lee Jae Myung departs for China for a summit with President Xi Jinping. During the four-day trip, Lee’s office said he would request China, North Korea’s major ally and biggest trading partner, to take “a constructive role” in efforts to promote peace on the Korean Peninsula.South Korea and the U.S. have long asked China to exercise its influence on North Korea to persuade it to return to talks or give up its nuclear program. But there are questions on how big of a leverage China has on its socialist neighbor. China, together with Russia, has also repeatedly blocked the U.S. and others’ attempts to toughen economic sanctions on North Korea in recent years.Later Sunday, South Korea convened an emergency national security council meeting where officials urged North Korea to stop ballistic missile launches, which violate U.N. Security Council resolutions. The council reported details of the launches and unspecified South Korean steps to Lee, according to the presidential office.North Korea hasn’t commented on US operation in VenezuelaThe launches followed Saturday’s dramatic U.S. military operation that ousted Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro from power and brought him to the U.S. to face narco-terrorism conspiracy charges. It represented America’s most assertive action to achieve regime change in a country since the nation’s 2003 invasion of Iraq.“Kim Jong Un may feel vindicated about his efforts to build a nuclear deterrent, as he likely did after Trump’s strikes on Iran,” said Leif-Eric Easley, professor of international studies at Ewha Womans University in Seoul. “However, leaders of hostile regimes will probably live with greater paranoia after seeing how quickly Maduro was extracted from his country to stand trial in the United States.”North Korea’s state media hasn’t commented on the U.S. operation.The official Korean Central News Agency said Sunday Kim visited a weapons factory on Saturday to review multipurpose precision guided weapons produced there. KCNA cited Kim as ordering officials to expand the current production capacity by about 2.5 times.Last Sunday, North Korea test-fired what it called long-range strategic cruise missiles. On Dec. 25, North Korea released photos showing apparent progress in the construction of its first nuclear-powered submarine.Associated Press writer Yuri Kageyama in Tokyo contributed to this report.
, Seoul —
North Korea launched multiple ballistic missiles toward the sea Sunday, its neighbors said, just hours before South Korea’s president leaves for China for talks expected to cover North Korea’s nuclear program.
South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement it detected several ballistic missile launches from North Korea’s capital region around 7:50 a.m. It said the missiles flew about 900 kilometers (560 miles) and that South Korea and U.S. authorities were analyzing details of the launches.
Video above: Wildfires in South Korea destroyed an ancient Buddhist temple
The Joint Chiefs of Staff said that South Korea maintains a readiness to repel any provocations by North Korea and is closely exchanging information with the U.S. and Japan on the North’s missile launches.
Japanese Defense Minister Shinjiro Koizumi said that at least two missile launches by North Korea have been confirmed. “They are a serious problem, threatening the peace and security of our nation, the region and the world,” Koizumi told reporters.
North Korea ramps up weapons display ahead of political meet
The launches were the latest weapons demonstration by North Korea in recent weeks. Experts say North Korea is aiming to show off or review its achievements in the defense sector ahead of its upcoming ruling party congress, the first of its kind in five years. Observers are watching the Workers Party congress to see whether North Korea will set a new policy on the U.S. and respond to its calls to resume long-stalled talks.
North Korea has been focusing on testing activities to enlarge its nuclear arsenal since its leader Kim Jong Un’s summitry with U.S. President Donald Trump fell apart in 2019. Kim has also boosted his diplomatic credentials by aligning with Russia over its war in Ukraine and tightening relations with China. Observers say Kim would believe his leverage has sharply increased to wrest concessions from Trump if they sit down for talks again.
North Korea hasn’t announced when it will hold the congress, but South Korea’s spy service said it will likely occur in January or February.
Launches comes before South Korean leader’s trip to China
Sunday’s launches also came hours before South Korean President Lee Jae Myung departs for China for a summit with President Xi Jinping. During the four-day trip, Lee’s office said he would request China, North Korea’s major ally and biggest trading partner, to take “a constructive role” in efforts to promote peace on the Korean Peninsula.
South Korea and the U.S. have long asked China to exercise its influence on North Korea to persuade it to return to talks or give up its nuclear program. But there are questions on how big of a leverage China has on its socialist neighbor. China, together with Russia, has also repeatedly blocked the U.S. and others’ attempts to toughen economic sanctions on North Korea in recent years.
Later Sunday, South Korea convened an emergency national security council meeting where officials urged North Korea to stop ballistic missile launches, which violate U.N. Security Council resolutions. The council reported details of the launches and unspecified South Korean steps to Lee, according to the presidential office.
North Korea hasn’t commented on US operation in Venezuela
The launches followed Saturday’s dramatic U.S. military operation that ousted Venezuelan leader Nicolás Maduro from power and brought him to the U.S. to face narco-terrorism conspiracy charges. It represented America’s most assertive action to achieve regime change in a country since the nation’s 2003 invasion of Iraq.
“Kim Jong Un may feel vindicated about his efforts to build a nuclear deterrent, as he likely did after Trump’s strikes on Iran,” said Leif-Eric Easley, professor of international studies at Ewha Womans University in Seoul. “However, leaders of hostile regimes will probably live with greater paranoia after seeing how quickly Maduro was extracted from his country to stand trial in the United States.”
North Korea’s state media hasn’t commented on the U.S. operation.
The official Korean Central News Agency said Sunday Kim visited a weapons factory on Saturday to review multipurpose precision guided weapons produced there. KCNA cited Kim as ordering officials to expand the current production capacity by about 2.5 times.
Last Sunday, North Korea test-fired what it called long-range strategic cruise missiles. On Dec. 25, North Korea released photos showing apparent progress in the construction of its first nuclear-powered submarine.
Associated Press writer Yuri Kageyama in Tokyo contributed to this report.
SEOUL, Jan 4 (Reuters) – North Korea fired a ballistic missile towards the sea off its east coast, South Korea’s Joint Chiefs of Staff said in a statement on Sunday.
(Reporting by Hyunjoo Jin and Jack Kim; Editing by Diane Craft)
They’re going to light up 2026 like dynamite: K-pop group BTS‘ comeback has an official date.
According to a note shared to social media by the entertainment company BigHit Music, the mega popular group will return on March 20.
That’s after a nearly four-year hiatus, as all seven members of BTS — RM, Jin, Jimin, V, Suga, Jung Kook and j-hope — completed South Korea’s mandatory military service.
“March 20th comeback confirmed,” BigHit Music wrote on X, formerly Twitter.
Rapper Suga was the last group member to be released — from his duties as a social service agent, an alternative to serving in the military that he reportedly chose due to a shoulder injury. That was in June 2025.
The six others, RM, V, Jimin, Jung Kook, Jin and j-hope, served in the army.
BTS tiered their enlistments, giving ample time for its members to focus on solo projects while the group was on a break.
Last summer, the group teased a world tour and announced that a new album would be released in the spring of 2026. At the time, they said they would begin working on the project in July 2025.
“Since it will be a group album, it will reflect each member’s thoughts and ideas,” they said in a statement. “We’re approaching the album with the same mindset we had when we first started.”
The 2026 album will mark their first since 2022’s anthology, “Proof,” their 2021 Japanese compilation album “BTS, the Best,” and their last studio album, “Be,” released in 2020.
BTS and Jimmy Fallon challenge each other to a series of mini tournament-style games while they ride the New York City subway.
SEOUL, Jan 2 (Reuters) – A local court in South Korea issued a new warrant to detain former President Yoon Suk Yeol for another six months, Yonhap News TV reported on Friday.
Yoon has been indicted on more charges including aiding an enemy state related to his short-lived imposition of martial law in 2024.
The judge cited concerns over him destroying evidence, Yonhap said.
(Reporting by Heejin Kim; Editing by Toby Chopra)
SEOUL/BEIJING, Jan 2 (Reuters) – Chinese President Xi Jinping will host South Korean President Lee Jae Myung on a state visit starting on Sunday, signalling Beijing’s intent to strengthen ties with Seoul amidst strained relations with Japan over Taiwan.
The visit marks the second meeting between Xi and Lee in just two months, an unusually short interval that signals China’s keen interest in reinforcing ties with Seoul and boosting economic collaboration and tourism, analysts say.
Relations between China and Japan are at their chilliest point in years after Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi suggested in November a hypothetical Chinese attack on Taiwan could trigger a military response from Tokyo.
Xi’s invitation to Lee for a state visit from Sunday is a calculated move aimed at deepening bilateral relations especially before the South Korean leader visits Japan, analysts say.
“China wants to emphasize South Korea’s importance slightly more than before,” said Kang Jun-young, professor of political economics at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies.
“China appears to have strategically decided that it would be better to have (Lee) visit China before South Korea holds a summit with Japan again,” he added.
The Lee administration has said it aims to “restore” ties with Beijing, acknowledging China is South Korea’s largest trading partner.
The pivot follows the two countries’ strained relations under Lee’s predecessor Yoon Suk Yeol, due to his closer alignment with Washington and Tokyo, as well as criticism of China’s handling of Taiwan.
Now, South Korea is trying to maintain balance but leaning towards cooperation with China to avoid being forced into any troubles that would threaten the Asian industrial powerhouse.
Lee said in December he wouldn’t take sides in the diplomatic dispute between China and Japan.
U.S. ALLIANCE AND NORTH KOREA
Still, China and South Korea face complex issues as China challenges the U.S., South Korea’s major ally in the region, and as nuclear-armed North Korea remains unpredictable.
China is North Korea’s major ally and economic lifeline.
Shin Beom-chul, a former South Korean vice defence minister and a senior research fellow at the Sejong Institute, said Xi and Lee might discuss some contentious issues such as efforts to modernise the South Korea- U.S. alliance that apparently aim to curb China’s dominance.
Currently, about 28,500 U.S. troops are based in South Korea to counter any threat from North Korea.
U.S. officials have signalled a plan to make those U.S. forces more flexible to respond to other threats, such as defending Taiwan and checking China’s growing military reach.
“Korea is not simply responding to threats on the peninsula,” General Xavier Brunson, commander of U.S. Forces Korea, said at a forum on Dec. 29. “Korea sits at the crossroads of broader regional dynamics that shape the balance of power across Northeast Asia.” he said.
Lee’s agenda with Xi includes persuading China to facilitate dialogue with North Korea, experts said.
North Korea has dismissed Lee’s outreach, labelling him a “hypocrite” and “confrontational maniac”.
Meanwhile, China and North Korea have been seeking closer coordination as North Korean leader Kim Jong Un stood shoulder to shoulder with Xi in September at a big military parade.
TECH, SUPPLY CHAINS AND K-POP
Lee’s visit to Beijing is expected to address cooperation in areas including critical minerals, supply chain and green industries, his office said earlier.
Seoul sources nearly half of its supply of rare earth minerals, critical to semiconductor manufacturing, come from China. Beijing also accounts for a third of Seoul’s annual chip exports, the largest market by far.
Last month, South Korean Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan and Chinese Commerce Minister Wang Wentao agreed to work towards stable rare earth supplies, the South Korean industry ministry said.
The visit may also foster partnerships on artificial intelligence and advanced technologies, experts said.
China’s Huawei Technologies plans to roll out the Ascend 950 AI chips in South Korea next year, aiming to provide an alternative to Nvidia for Korean firms, Huawei’s South Korea CEO Balian Wang told a press conference last month.
Wang mentioned ongoing discussions with potential customers, without naming those clients.
Huawei did not address questions from Reuters about Wang’s comments.
Another issue at stake is Beijing’s effective ban on K-pop content since around the 2017 deployment of a U.S.-led missile defence system in South Korea.
The chief executive of SM Entertainment, a leading K-pop agency will join Lee’s business delegation, according to local media.
(Additional reporting by Brenda Goh, Hyunjoo Jin, Heejin Kim, Writing by Ju-min Park; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
Sangdong mine, South Korea — Over the course of decades, China has come to dominate the rare earths and critical minerals industries, virtually cornering the market on raw materials that are essential to every aspect of modern life, from cellphones to armor piercing ammunition and AI missile guidance systems.
Beijing’s stranglehold on the production of these valuable metals and minerals has driven a hasty search by U.S. authorities to secure alternative supply options.
Lewis Black says his company is ready to help fill the void, at least when it comes to the supply of tungsten, a mineral he calls “vital” to U.S. defense needs.
Black, CEO of the Canadian mining company Almonty Industries, flew from New York to South Korea last week to give CBS News a tour of the mine he hopes will soon be producing enough tungsten to meet at least the most urgent of America’s needs.
An aerial view shows the Sangdong tungsten mine in eastern South Korea, owned and operated by Almonty Industries, in November 2025.
CBS News
In the days before his flight to the Sangdong mine, Black met with U.S. officials, including at the White House, and he signed a deal guaranteeing that Almonty will, in the future, supply enough tungsten for U.S. security needs.
Black said he couldn’t discuss the details of the agreement with the U.S. government.
Tungsten’s superpower
The power of tungsten is rooted in the fact that it has the highest melting point of any element. While used in everyday items from electrical wiring to semiconductors and batteries, its applications in the defense industry make it truly indispensable.
“It’s vital. It’s further than critical, it’s vital,” Black told CBS News, standing in an enormous red building covered in corrugated steel sheeting that houses his processing plant in Sangdong.
As he spoke, machinery that breaks down the ore — the rocks embedded with tungsten — ground in a slow circular motion, undergoing tests in preparation for being fully commissioned later this year.
A view inside a tunnel at the Sangdong tungsten mine in South Korea, November 2025.
CBS News
“It’s not just in the things you can see like munitions and armor,” Black said. “You want to build armored vehicles? All the engineering, all the AI chips, AI chips you can’t build without tungsten gas. You want to build a plane? The rockets, it’s in everything. It’s a vital component, a small one, but without it, you can’t do it.”
The Sangdong tungsten mine’s rise, fall and renaissance
Tungsten was first discovered in a rocky outcrop at the Sangdong site, about 115 miles southeast of Seoul, in 1906. A Japanese company started mining there about a decade later, and the tungsten extracted was later used for Japan’s war machine during the Second World War.
The end of that war brought an end to Japan’s occupation of the Korean Peninsula, and the Sangdong mine returned to Korean control. It would go on to have a profound effect on South Korea’s economy, at one point accounting for 30% of the nation’s GDP.
Heavy machinery operates underground in the Sangdong tungsten mine in South Korea, in November 2025.
CBS News
South Korean presidents visited the mine at least six times — it was a source of national pride. But in the 1990s, it fell victim to China’s price dumping policies and was mothballed.
For the ensuing three decades, the U.S., along with many other Western nations, benefited from the cheap, government subsidized materials being produced by China.
But that benefit became a reliance, and it left Washington exposed and vulnerable amid a tense trade war with China that’s seen Beijing impose export restrictions on some rare earths and other critical materials.
In response, there’s been a rush to establish alternative supply chains.
China controls at least 80% of the world’s current tungsten supplies, according to Almonty, with Russia and North Korea both holding a smaller but significant share of the assets.
Almonty Industries is in the process of relocating its headquarters to New York. It’s a clear indication that the U.S. government has become a very important part of Black’s business — his biggest customer, in fact.
Almonty took ownership of the Sandong mine in 2015.
Catching up with China is “going to be disruptive”
Almonty also has tungsten mines in Spain and Portugal, and it recently purchased one in Montana, specifically in the interest, Black said, of U.S. national security.
“With the U.S. government, that’s one of the reasons why we’ve taken a mine in the U.S. — bringing our technology to the country so that we can start to generate more human capital for the long term,” he said. “To me it feels good for the legacy of the company to fill a gap that has been left hugely exposed.”
Black said the mine in Montana won’t be operational for years, however, as Almonty still needs to secure permits and train personnel. It’s all analogous, he notes, to the overarching problem the U.S. and its Western partners have as they seek to untangle themselves from supply chain reliance on China; it’s going to take a long time.
“China dominates so many different sectors, whether it be rare earths, lithium, graphite, tin, lead, aluminum,” Black said, adding that over the last eight decades many such industries simply “fell out of favor in the West, and we abandoned raw materials.”
There are more recently discovered sources of some key materials, particularly in Africa, and the U.S. has sought to build business ties there — but Black says China has “covered most bases,” already securing investment in many African nations through its “Belt and Road” initiative.
He believes it will take at least a decade for the U.S. to completely diversify its supply chains, not least because of the need to train a workforce.
“We don’t have the people to run these mines,” Black told CBS News. “The U.S. and the West have some catching up to do.”
In the interim, he expects American industry to face some disruption.
“I bought this 10 years ago,” he said of the Sangdong facility. “Mines in democracies are a journey, and not for the faint hearted.”
Black expects “it’s going to be a really tough, miserable journey” as industries such as the American automotive sector work to wean themselves off cheap Chinese raw materials.
“You want to onshore all this production but you have no way of producing the components to supply this production. This has got to be done … It’s going to be disruptive, there are going to be times when some sectors are going to run out of components — that’s inevitable. In this particular instance, everyone is going to just suck it up and just power forward, because it’s the only way it can be done.”
A few months ago the U.S. Defense Logistics Agency put out a Request for Information (RFI) for tungsten — effectively an SOS call for the critical mineral, which surprised some in the industry as it effectively exposed the U.S. shortage.
“I think the U.S. government is saying, ‘all right, whatever we can find, we’d better stash it while we build this supply chain,’” said Black.
He expects the Sangdong to be operational by the first quarter of 2026, and once it is, it should be running 16 hours a day, with the associated processing plant operational 24 hours per day, producing an estimated 1.2 million tons of tungsten ore per year.
SEOUL, Dec 28 (Reuters) – South Korea’s President Lee Jae Myung has appointed Lee Hye-hoon, a conservative politician and former lawmaker of the opposition United Future Party, as budget minister, a spokesman at the presidential office said at a briefing on Sunday.
Lee, the newly appointed minister, said she aligns with the president’s goal of both pursing economic growth and improving social welfare, in a statement following the announcement.
President Lee has pushed for a major overhaul of ministries, which he views as having too much power, including stripping the finance ministry of its budget planning authority.
Some experts have said that changes to budget planning policies may lead to higher national debt under the liberal president.
(Reporting by Heejin Kim and Jihoon Lee; Editing by Christopher Cushing)
Nestled deep in the mountains of South Korea, in a remote part of the country’s east, is one of the world’s largest deposits of tungsten, a critical mineral the U.S. desperately needs for its defense. As Anna Coren shows, a newly reopened mine in South Korea could soon fill that need.
SEOUL, Dec 26 (Reuters) – South Korea’s special prosecutor requested a 10-year prison sentence for former President Yoon Suk Yeol on charges including obstructing attempts to arrest him following his failed bid to impose martial law, the Yonhap News Agency reported on Friday.
Prosecutors have accused the ousted president of trying to block investigators seeking to arrest him in January by barricading himself inside the presidential compound.
The request is the first jail term sought by special prosecutors over the multiple charges Yoon faces.
(Reporting by Heejin Kim and Joyce Lee; Editing by Himani Sarkar and Christian Schmollinger)
SEOUL, Dec 23 (Reuters) – North Korean leader Kim Jong Un attended the opening ceremonies of hotels in a tourist zone of the country with his daughter Ju Ae, as he sought to highlight the country’s economic progress before a key party congress due to take place early next year.
Five hotels opened on Saturday and Sunday in North Korea’s Samjiyon tourist zone, in the northeast part of the Korean peninsula near the border with China, state media KCNA said on Tuesday.
Kim, who attended the ceremonies on Saturday, toured the upmarket hotels with Ju Ae, state media photographs showed.
Some analysts view Kim’s teenage daughter as the frontrunner to become the country’s next leader.
Kim said the hotels were “clear proof of the rising status of our people and the development potential of our country,” according to KCNA.
The North Korean leader has attended multiple opening ceremonies of facilities in the past month, including three regional factory openings last week alone.
North Korea is expected to hold its first party congress in five years in early 2026, where a new development plan for the next five years is expected to be unveiled. State media such as Rodong Sinmun, have been urging an all-out public effort to complete major projects ahead of the gathering.
SEOUL: South Korea’s central bank said on Tuesday (Dec 16) it would be an “overstatement” to blame ample liquidity conditions in the domestic market for a weaker won currency and price upswings in the residential property market.
“Looking at exchange rates, it appears that factors such as increased overseas securities investment by residents and the tendency of export companies to hold foreign currency are having a greater impact than liquidity conditions,” the Bank of Korea said in a report.
The BOK also said an accumulation of liquidity from the past has been flowing into the local property market and boosting prices, rather than fresh money supply.
Tuesday’s report comes as the bank kept interest rates unchanged for a fourth straight meeting in late November as a tumbling won reduced the scope for further easing, amid rising financial stability risks from persistent housing price gains in Seoul.
According to the BOK, domestic liquidity conditions do not warrant the alarm raised by some commentators who consider that excessive liquidity is to blame for a weaker won and asset price inflation.
The BOK has been taking measures to curb the decline in the won, which is currently hovering at a 16-year low, by extending a currency swap agreement with the National Pension Service for another year, a measure aimed at stabilising the dollar-won rate by easing selling pressure on the currency.
One of the nicest perks of being location independent, is that I get to function across a lot of different cultures and, in general, my life experience is significantly more diverse. Today I’m going to share one of these unusual, but nice experiences, with the mention that this is actually part of my current lifestyle.
A Jjim Jil Bang is a traditional Korean bathhouse. It’s one of the most popular places in the Korean social culture. If you ever watched K-drama, chances are that you’ve already seen the interior of a Jjim Jil Bang, because in any K-drama at least one scene is filmed there. Inside Korea, they are spread all over the places, with various sizes and services included. Abroad, they are positioned slightly different, as “affordable luxury experiences”.
For instance, the biggest one in Saigon, Vietnam, called Golden Lotus, is occupying an entire building, with many amenities and activities, but its price is incredibly affordable (a simple breakdown of what you pay is at the end).
What You Can Do at the Jjim Jil Bang
First of all, there is a big communal area, from where all the other amenities unfold. That’s the main differentiator of the Korean bathhouse, its social layer: you share a big room with all the other guests, and sometimes you can even make new connections, or at least spark interesting conversations (but don’t try to push it, the main reason people are there is to relax and unwind).
Hot Rooms
There are 3-4 hot rooms (depending on how you define “hot”).
Volcanic Rock pebbles – this one maintains a temperature between 62-65 degrees Celsius, and the floor is made of volcanic ash, compacted into small pebbles. In the beginning, it’s a bit difficult to adjust your balance, walking on these moving tiny pebbles, which are quite hot, but after a few tries, you will get your balance.
Himalayan Salt – this one has the floor and walls made of Himalayan salt bricks. It also maintains the same temperature between 62-65 degrees Celsius.
Herbal Bags – this one has a slightly “lower” temperature, 60-62 degrees Celsius, and the main feature is the herbal bags hung on the walls, which are releasing nice fragrances (also very healthy, I presume).
Moderate Himalayan Salt – there is an extra Himalayan salt room, in which the temperature is not that high, I think somewhere between 45-50 degrees Celsius, so you can use that as an adjustment layer before going into the really hot ones.
All hot rooms are usually very dimly lit, almost completely dark, except the Himalayan salt rooms, which are on a medium orange frequency.
Cold / Normal Rooms
Cold Igloo – this one is my second favorite room, offering an incredible minus 2 degrees, and walls with actual ice on them. It is used as a contrast to the hot rooms.
Oxygen Room – this is my favorite room. It’s just a normal room with mattresses and pillows but the aircon is pushing in a significant amount of oxygen. In Saigon’s quite polluted atmosphere, this is like a small corner of paradise.
Man / Woman sleeping rooms – these are just normal rooms, but they’re very dimly lit and you’re required to keep quiet. It’s, as the name implies, a space for sleeping and deep rest.
Red Caves – these are very small tunnel-like enclosures, with an infra-red light. It’s the preferred spot to rest in between hot and cold rooms.
Extra Activities – Games, Movies, Work and Fun
Like I said, this specific Jjim Jil Bang is occupying 4 stories on a very spacious building in Thao Dien. The spa is only one level. The rest is filled with restaurant, 2 small cinema rooms, massage rooms, a study cafe (where you can do some deep work), and a generous fun and games area (taking up one of the 3 stories).
What You Should Bring
You don’t need towels, you will get them when you get your entrance bracelet. The same bracelet will be used throughout the spa when you pay extra (for the drinks or games, for example). You can get your phone if you want to, but talking loud is discouraged and in general, the etiquette is that you should be mindful and quiet.
Why You Should Do This
One of the main reasons we’re going there at least 2-3 times a month is obviously recharging and unwinding. But there are obvious health benefits to this too, the hot and cold switching, the Himalayan salt and the oxygen room are a big health plus.
Now, about the price. When you pay, you pay the main entry, not by the hour. Which means you can spend, in theory, at least 10 hours there. In practice, we’re not very far away from this number, usually spending a full day, or about 8 hours there. The entry price for a couple is around 600,000 VND. Add to this two rounds of soft drinks (iced tea, usually) and you get to around 900,000 VND, or 30 EUR/day, for a couple, with a small baby. But it’s usually less than that, because they are running promotions all the time. For instance, the happy hour is giving you 50% discount, and it runs between 9:00 AM and 11:00 AM (at the time of writing). We get there before 11 anyway, so most of the time we pay a lot less than 30 EUR.
You do the math.
If you want to enjoy this specific Jjim Jil Bang in Saigon, the easiest way is to follow their Facebook page.
The saga of a Los Angeles Army veteran who legally immigrated to the United States, was wounded in combat and self-deported to South Korea earlier this year, became a flashpoint during a testy congressional hearing about the Trump administration’s immigration policy.
Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem was grilled Thursday on Capitol Hill about military veterans deported during the immigration crackdown launched earlier this year, including in Los Angeles.
“Sir, we have not deported U.S. citizens or military veterans,” Noem responded when questioned by Rep. Seth Magaziner (D-R.I.).
Rep. Seth Magaziner (D-R.I.) speaks while joined on a video call by a man who he said was a U.S. military veteran who self-deported to South Korea, during a hearing of the House Committee on Homeland Security on Thursday.
(Mark Schiefelbein / Associated Press)
An aide then held up a tablet showing a Zoom connection with Purple Heart recipient Sae Joon Park in South Korea. The congressman argued that Park had “sacrificed more for this country than most people ever have” and asked Noem if she would investigate Park’s case given her discretion as a cabinet member. Noem pledged to “absolutely look at his case.”
Park, reached in Seoul on Thursday night, said he was skeptical that Noem would follow through on her promise, but said that he had “goosebumps” watching the congressional hearing.
“It was amazing. And then I’m getting tons of phone calls from all my friends back home and everywhere else. I’m so very grateful for everything that happened today,” Park, 56, said, noting that friends told him that a clip of his story appeared on ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” show Thursday night.
The late-night host featured footage of Park’s moment in the congressional hearing in his opening monologue.
“Is anyone OK with this? Seriously, all kidding aside, we deported a veteran with a Purple Heart?” Kimmel said, adding that Republicans “claim to care so much about veterans, but they don’t at all.”
Park legally immigrated to the United States when he was 7, grew up in Koreatown and the San Fernando Valley, and joined the Army after graduating from Notre Dame High School in Sherman Oaks in 1988.
Photo of Sae Joon Park, an Army veteran with a Purple Heart, who self-deported to South Korea under threat of deportation.
(Courtesy of Sae Joon Park)
The green card holder was deployed to Panama in 1989 as the U.S. tried to depose the nation’s de facto leader, Gen. Manuel Noriega. Park was shot twice and honorably discharged. Suffering PTSD, he self-medicated with illicit drugs, went to prison after jumping bail on drug possession charges, became sober and raised two children in Hawaii.
Earlier this year, when Park checked in for his annual meeting with federal officials to verify his sobriety and employment, he was given the option of being immediately detained and deported, or wearing an ankle monitor for three weeks as he got his affairs in order before leaving the country for a decade.
At the time, Department of Homeland Security Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said Park had an “extensive criminal history” and had been given a final removal order, with the option to self-deport.
Park chose to leave the country voluntarily. He initially struggled to acclimate in a nation he hasn’t lived in since he was a child, but said Thursday night that his mental state — and his Korean language skills — have improved.
“It hasn’t been easy. Of course, I miss home like crazy,” he said. “I’m doing the best I can. I’m usually a very positive person, so I feel like everything happens for a reason, and I’m just trying to hang in there until hopefully I make it back home.”
Among Park’s top concerns when he left the United States in June was that his mother, who is 86 and struggling with dementia, would pass away while he couldn’t return to the county. But her lack of awareness about his situation has been somewhat of a strange blessing, Park said.
“She really doesn’t know I’m even here. So every time I talk to her, she’s like, ‘Oh, where are you,’ and I tell her, and she’s like, ‘Oh, when are you coming home? Oh, why are you there?’” Park said. “In a weird way, it’s kind of good because she doesn’t have to worry about me all the time. But at the same time, I would love to be next to her while she’s going through this.”
Ron Curtis, an English professor in Montreal, lived for 40 years with a degenerative spinal disease, in what he called the “black hole” of chronic pain.
On a July day in 2022, Mr. Curtis, 64, ate a last bowl of vegetable soup made by his wife, Lori, and, with the help of a palliative care doctor, died in his bedroom overlooking a lake.
Aron Wade, a successful 54-year-old stage and television actor in Belgium, decided he could no longer tolerate life with the depression that haunted him for three decades.
Last year, after a panel of medical experts found he had “unbearable mental suffering,” a doctor came to his home and gave him medicine to stop his heart, with his partner and two best friends at his side.
Argemiro Ariza was in his early 80s when he began to lose function in his limbs, no longer able to care for his wife, who had dementia, in their home in Bogotá.
Doctors diagnosed A.L.S., and he told his daughter Olga that he wanted to die while he still had dignity. His children threw him a party with a mariachi band and lifted him from his wheelchair to dance. A few days later, he admitted himself to a hospital, and a doctor administered a drug that ended his life.
Until recently, each of these deaths would have been considered a murder. But a monumental change is underway around the world. From liberal European countries to conservative Latin American ones, a new way of thinking about death is starting to take hold.
Stephanie Nolen is exploring access, attitudes and approaches to medically assisted death around the world.
Over the past five years, the practice of allowing a physician to help severely ill patients end their lives with medication has been legalized in nine countries on three continents. Courts or legislatures, or both, are considering legalization in a half-dozen more, including South Korea and South Africa, as well as eight of the 31 American states where it remains prohibited.
It is a last frontier in the expansion of individual autonomy. More people are seeking to define the terms of their deaths in the same way they have other aspects of their lives, such as marriage and childbearing. This is true even in Latin America, where conservative institutions such as the Roman Catholic church are still powerful.
“We believe in the priority of our control over our bodies, and as a heterogeneous culture, we believe in choices: If your choice does not affect me, go ahead,” said Dr. Julieta Moreno Molina, a bioethicist who has advised Colombia’s Ministry of Health on its assisted dying regulations.
Yet, as assisted death gains more acceptance, there are major unresolved questions about who should be eligible. While most countries begin with assisted death for terminal illness, which has the most public support, this is often followed quickly by a push for wider access. With that push comes often bitter public debate.
Should someone with intractable depression be allowed an assisted death?
European countries and Colombia all permit people with irremediable suffering from conditions such as depression or schizophrenia to seek an assisted death. But in Canada, the issue has become contentious. Assisted death for people who do not have a reasonably foreseeable natural death was legalized in 2021, but the government has repeatedly excluded people with mental illness. Two of them are challenging the exclusion in court on the grounds that it violates their constitutional rights.
In public debate, supporters of the right to assisted death for these patients say that people who have lived with severe depression for years, and have tried a variety of therapies and medications, should be allowed to decide when they are no longer willing to keep pursuing treatments. Opponents, concerned that mental illness can involve a pathological wish to die, say it can be difficult to predict the potential effectiveness of treatments. And, they argue, people who struggle to get help from an overburdened public health service may simply give up and choose to die, though their conditions might have been improved.
Should a child with an incurable condition be able to choose assisted death?
The ability to consent is a core consideration in requesting assisted death. Only a handful of countries are willing to extend that right to minors. Even in the places that do, there are just a few assisted deaths for children each year, almost always children with cancer.
In Colombia and the Netherlands, children over 12 can request assisted death on their own. Parents can provide consent for children 11 and younger.
Denise de Ruijter took comfort in her Barbie dolls when she struggled to connect with people. She was diagnosed with autism and had episodes of depression and psychosis. As a teenager in a Dutch town, she craved the life her schoolmates had — nights out, boyfriends — but couldn’t manage it.
She attempted suicide several times before applying for an assisted death at 18. Evaluators required her to try three years of additional therapies before agreeing her suffering was unbearable. She died in 2021, with her family and Barbies nearby.
The issue is under renewed scrutiny in the Netherlands, where, over the past decade, a growing number of adolescents have applied for assisted death for relief from irremediable psychiatric suffering from conditions such as eating disorders and anxiety.
Most such applications by teens are either withdrawn by the patient, or rejected by assessors, but public concern over a few high-profile cases of teens who received assisted deaths prompted the country’s regulator to consider a moratorium on approvals for children applying on the basis of psychiatric suffering.
Should someone with dementia be allowed assisted death?
Many people dread the idea of losing their cognitive abilities and their autonomy, and hope to have an assisted death when they reach that point. But this is a more complex situation to regulate than for a person who can still make a clear request.
How can a person who is losing their mental capacity consent to dying? Most governments, and doctors, are too uncomfortable to permit it, even though the idea tends to be popular in countries with aging populations.
In Colombia, Spain, Ecuador and the Canadian province of Quebec, people who have been diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease or other kinds of cognitive decline can request assessment for an assisted death before they lose mental capacity, sign an advance request — and then have a physician end their life after they have lost the ability to consent themselves.
But that raises a separate, challenging, question: After people lose the capacity to request an assisted death, who should decide it’s time?
Their spouses? Their children? Their doctors? The government? Colombia entrusts families with this role. The Netherlands leaves it up to doctors — but many refuse to do it, unwilling to administer lethal drugs to a patient who can’t clearly articulate a rational wish to die.
Jan Grijpma was always clear with his daughter, Maria: When his mind went, he didn’t want to live any more. Maria worked with his longtime family doctor, in Amsterdam, to identify the point when Mr. Grijpma, 90 and living in a nursing home, was losing his ability to consent himself.
When it seemed close, in 2023, they booked the day, and he updated his day planner: Thursday, visit the vicar; Friday, bicycle with physiotherapy and get a haircut; Sunday, pancakes with Maria; Monday, euthanasia.
All of these questions are becoming part of the discussion as the right to control and plan one’s own death is pushed in front of reluctant legislatures and uneasy medical professionals.
Dr. Madeline Li, a Toronto psychiatrist, was given the task of developing the assisted-dying practice in one of Canada’s largest hospitals when the procedure was first decriminalized in 2015. She began with assessing patients for eligibility and then moved to providing medical assistance in dying, or MAID, as it is called in Canada. For some patients with terminal cancer, it felt like the best form of care she could offer, she said.
But then Canada’s eligibility criteria expanded, and Dr. Li found herself confronting a different kind of patient.
“To provide assisted dying to somebody dying of a condition who is not happy with how they’re going to die, I’m willing to assist them, and hasten that death,” she said. “I struggle more with people who aren’t dying and want MAID — I think then you’re assisting suicide. If you’re not dying — if I didn’t give you MAID, you wouldn’t otherwise die — then you’re a person who’s not unhappy with how you’re going to die. You’re unhappy with how you’re living.”
Who has broken the taboo?
For decades, Switzerland was the only country to permit assisted death; assisted suicide was legalized there in 1942. It took a further half century for a few more countries to loosen their laws. Now decriminalization of some form of assisted death has occurred across Europe.
But there has recently been a wave of legalization in Latin America, where Colombia was long an outlier, having allowed legal assisted dying since 2015.
Paola Roldán Espinosa had a thriving career in business in Ecuador, and a toddler, when she was diagnosed with A.L.S. in 2023. Her health soon deteriorated to the point that she needed a ventilator.
She wanted to die on her terms — and took the case to the country’s highest court. In February 2024, the court responded to her petition by decriminalizing assisted dying. Ms. Roldán, then 42, had the death she sought, with her family around her, a month later.
Ecuador has decriminalized assisted dying through constitutional court cases, and Peru’s Supreme Court has permitted individual exceptions to the law which prohibits the procedure, opening the door to expansion. Cuba’s national assembly legalized assisted dying in 2023, although no regulations on how the procedure will work are yet in place. In October, Uruguay’s parliament passed a long-debated law allowing assisted death for the terminally ill.
The first country in Asia to take steps toward legalization is South Korea, where a bill to decriminalize assisted death has been proposed at the National Assembly several times but has not come to a vote. At the same time, the Constitutional Court, which for years refused to hear cases on the subject, has agreed to adjudicate a petition from a disabled man with severe and chronic pain who seeks an assisted death.
Access in the United States remains limited: 11 jurisdictions (10 states plus the District of Columbia) allow assisted suicide or physician-assisted death, for patients who have a terminal diagnosis, and in some cases, only for patients who are already in hospice care. It will become legal in Delaware on Jan. 1, 2026.
In Slovenia, in 2024, 55 percent of the population who voted in a national referendum were in favor of legalizing assisted death, and parliament duly passed a law in July. But pushback from right-wing politicians then forced a new referendum, and in late November, 54 percent of those who voted rejected the legalization.
And in the United Kingdom, a bill to legalize assisted death for people with terminal illness has made its way slowly through parliament. It has faced fierce opposition from a coalition of more than 60 groups for people with disabilities, who argue they may face subtle coercion to end their lives rather than drain their families or the state of resources for their care.
Why now?
In many countries, decriminalization of assisted dying has followed the expansion of rights for personal choice in other areas, such as the removal of restrictions on same-sex marriage, abortion and sometimes drug use.
“I would expect it to be on the agenda in every liberal democracy,” said Wayne Sumner, a medical ethicist at the University of Toronto who studies the evolution of norms and regulations around assisted dying. “They’ll come to it at their own speed, but it follows with these other policies.”
The change is also being driven by a convergence of political, demographic and cultural trends.
As populations age, and access to health care improves, more people are living longer. Older populations mean more chronic disease, and more people living with compromised health. And they are thinking about death, and what they will — and won’t — be willing to tolerate in the last years of their lives.
At the same time, there is diminishing tolerance for suffering that is perceived as unnecessary.
“Until very recently, we were a society where few people lived past 60 — and now suddenly we live much longer,” said Lina Paola Lara Negrette, a psychologist who until October was the director of the Dying With Dignity Foundation in Colombia. “Now people here need to think about the system, and the services that are available, and what they will want.”
Changes in family structures and communities, particularly in rapidly urbanizing middle-income countries, mean that traditional networks of care are less strong, which shifts how people can imagine living in older age or with chronic illness, she added.
“When you had many siblings and a lot of generations under one roof, the question of care was a family thing,” she said. “That has changed. And it shapes how we think about living, and dying.”
How does assisted dying work?
Beyond the ethical dilemmas, actually carrying out legalized assisted deaths involves countless choices for countries. Spain requires a waiting period of at least 15 days between a patient’s assessments (but the average wait in practice is 75 days). In most other places, the prescribed wait is less than two weeks for patients with terminal conditions, but often longer in practice, said Katrine Del Villar, a professor of constitutional law at the Queensland University of Technology who tracks trends in assisted dying
Most countries allow patients to choose between administering the drugs themselves or having a health care provider do it. When both options are available, the overwhelming majority of people choose to have a health care provider end their life with an injection that stops their heart.
In many countries only a doctor can administer the drugs, but Canada and New Zealand permit nurse practitioners to provide medically assisted deaths too.
One Australian state prohibits medical professionals from raising the topic of assisted death. A patient must ask about it first.
Who determines eligibility is another issue. In the Netherlands, two physicians assess a patient; in Colombia, it’s a panel consisting of a medical specialist, a psychologist and a lawyer. The draft legislation in Britain would require both a panel and two independent physicians.
Switzerland and the states of Oregon and Vermont are the only jurisdictions in the world that explicitly allow people who are not residents access to assisted deaths.
Most countries permit medical professionals to conscientiously object to providing assisted deaths and allow faith-based medical institutions to refuse to participate. In Canada, individual professionals have the right to refuse, but a court challenge is underway seeking to end the ability of hospitals that are controlled by faith-based organizations and that operate with public funds to refuse to allow assisted deaths on their premises.
“Even when assisted dying has been legal and available somewhere for a long time, there can be a gap between what is legal and what is acceptable — what most physicians and patients and families feel comfortable with,” said Dr. Sisco van Veen, an ethicist and psychiatrist at Amsterdam Medical University. “And this isn’t static. It evolves over time.”
Jin Yu Young in Seoul, José Bautista in Madrid, José María León Cabrera in Quito, Veerle Schyns in Amsterdam and Koba Ryckewaert in Brussels contributed reporting.
I was recently a guest on Inspiring Entrepreneurs (Antreprenori care Inspiră), a Romanian podcast hosted by Florin Roșoga. We had a really great conversation — we talked about leaving Romania after 40, the framework I use for choosing countries, what “home” actually means when you’ve lived in multiple places, and the unexpected path from programmer to bar owner in Vietnam.
The podcast is in Romanian, but I’ve summarized the key insights below for English readers. You can also follow the auto-translation captions on YouTube, they do a pretty good job.
41:01 — How to meet new people in a foreign country
The 5 Questions I Ask Before Moving to a New Country
Over the years, I’ve created a simple framework for evaluating potential places to live. Before moving to any country, I ask myself these five questions:
1. Can I sustain myself financially here?
This isn’t just about cost of living — it’s about whether my income sources remain stable, whether I can work remotely without friction, and whether the financial math actually works long-term.
2. Can I get legal status without complications?
Visas, residency permits, tax implications. Some countries make this easy (Portugal’s NHR regime was excellent when I moved there), others create endless bureaucratic friction. The legal pathway matters more than people think.
3. What kind of social life can I build here?
Can I meet people? Is there a community of expats or locals open to newcomers? Can I learn the language, or at least function in English? Your social circle contracts dramatically when you move abroad — this question determines whether you’ll rebuild it or stay isolated.
4. Does this place support my wellbeing?
I look at practical things: walkable neighborhoods, parks, healthcare access, grocery stores, general entertainment options. The infrastructure of daily life. If the basics are difficult to reach, everything else becomes harder.
5. How do I actually feel here after a few weeks?
Before any permanent move, I do a two-weeks minimum test-drive. Research is useful, but nothing replaces the gut feeling you get from being there. Can I see myself here long-term, or am I just excited by novelty?
Key Insights from the Conversation
Moving isn’t about escaping — it’s about curiosity. Every time you change countries, entropy increases. More chaos, but also more clarity about who you really are. The chaos becomes a practice in adaptation.
To truly change, you have to leave something behind. Not just objects — parts of your identity. You have to let a piece of yourself die. Sounds dramatic, but it’s honest. The old version of you doesn’t fit the new context.
Accept chaos as a phase. The disorientation of a new place isn’t a problem to solve immediately. It’s evidence that you’re learning to function in the world again.
Connection gives meaning to place. Whether it’s a bar, a meetup, or random conversations — new relationships are what transform a foreign city into somewhere you belong. The Harvard study on happiness confirms this: wellbeing depends more on the depth of human connection than material comfort.
About Florin’s Podcast
Inspiring Entrepreneurs is one of the longest-running entrepreneurship podcasts in Romania, with over 560 episodes. Florin has a gift for drawing out personal stories beyond the usual business talking points. If you understand Romanian, it’s worth exploring his archive.
If you read my blog on a regular basis, you know that during the last couple of years I’ve been spending a lot of time in Asia. Among all the countries I’ve been in here, South Korea holds a special place. To the extent that I actually learned Korean myself and spent in total more than 6 months there. Here are 7 random facts about South Korea discovered while actually living here.
1. The Jeonse System: A Unique Real Estate Approach
The entire real estate market in South Korea operates on a distinctive type of loan system called jeonse (전세), which relies on the tenant providing a massive advance deposit to the landlord. This isn’t just some modern financial innovation—it’s one of the oldest processes in South Korea, with roots stretching back hundreds of years into Korean history.
Here’s how it works: instead of paying monthly rent, a tenant provides the landlord with a lump sum deposit that can amount to 50-80% of the property’s actual value. The landlord then invests this money during the lease period (typically two years), and at the end of the contract, returns the entire deposit to the tenant. No monthly rent. No interest paid to the tenant. Just the deposit returned in full.
This system emerged from Korea’s agricultural past, where trust and long-term relationships formed the foundation of economic transactions. In a country where banking systems were underdeveloped for centuries, jeonse provided both security for property owners and affordability for tenants who could save money over time rather than hemorrhaging it through monthly rent payments.
The practice has survived modernization, economic crises, and the digital age—a proof of how deeply embedded certain cultural and economic patterns can become in a society’s fabric.
2. Kimchi Is More Than Food, It’s Family Initiation
Kimchi is the most frequent ingredient in Korean cuisine, appearing at virtually every meal as a staple food. But it’s far more than just fermented vegetables—it’s a cultural cornerstone and a rite of passage.
When someone joins a new family in Korea, particularly through marriage, one of the traditional trials they must endure is learning how to make kimchi according to that family’s specific recipe. Each family has its own variation, passed down through generations, with subtle differences in spice levels, fermentation time, and ingredient ratios that carry the weight of lineage and identity.
The annual kimjang—the communal kimchi-making ceremony before winter—is so culturally significant that UNESCO added it to its list of Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity. It’s not just about preserving cabbage; it’s about preserving community bonds, family traditions, and cultural continuity in a rapidly modernizing world.
3. The Study Room Buildings: 24-Hour Academic Monasteries
Throughout South Korea, especially in big cities like Seoul or Busan, you’ll find entire buildings dedicated entirely to study rooms—spaces containing nothing but a few chairs, a table, and perhaps a small fridge. Each room has a locker with a number pad and access code, creating a personal study room on demand that students rent by the hour or day.
These dokseosil (독서실) or reading rooms are just one of the symptoms of the intense dedication to education that permeates Korean society. Students don’t just visit for a few hours—some spend entire nights there, studying until dawn, then heading directly to university for morning classes without returning home.
The rooms are almost ascetic—deliberately stripped of distraction, designed for one purpose only: focused concentration. There’s something both admirable and haunting about buildings filled with young people, each locked in their individual cells of voluntary confinement, sacrificing sleep and social life at the altar of academic achievement. As part of one of the hackathons I participated in Seoul (yes, I did that too) I also had the experience: we locked our team in such a room during the night, with the only goal of finishing our hackathon idea implementation. It was one of the most interesting experiences of my life.
4. Public Drunkenness as Social Badge of Honor
In South Korea, drinking is not just socially accepted—it’s practically a competitive sport. Unlike Western societies where stumbling drunk through public spaces earns you judgmental stares and social ostracism, Korea treats public intoxication with remarkable tolerance. Even admiration.
Fall asleep on the subway after a night of soju? No one blinks. Stumble out of a pojangmacha (포장마차) – street food tent – barely able to walk? You’re not seen as a problem—you’re seen as someone who gave their all to the evening’s social obligations.
There’s an almost warrior-like respect for those who drink themselves into oblivion. The person passed out on the sidewalk isn’t viewed as an outcast but rather as a mighty warrior who fought incredibly powerful demons in the form of endless rounds of anju (안주) – drinking snacks – and geonbae (건배) – cheers. They didn’t back down. They didn’t quit early. They honored their companions by drinking until they physically couldn’t anymore.
This cultural approach to alcohol seems to emerge from the deeply embedded Confucian workplace hierarchy, where refusing a drink from a superior is essentially unthinkable, and the evening drinking session—hoesik (회식)—is where real bonding and business happens. The hangover the next morning? That’s just evidence of loyalty and dedication.
5. Karaoke Rooms: The Psychological Pressure Release Valve
Karaoke in Korea isn’t the public performance anxiety-fest it often is in the West. It’s a psychological necessity—a social valve that helps an entire nation maintain its collective mental well-being.
Throughout Korean cities, you’ll find entire buildings composed of isolated noraebang (노래방, literally “song room”) chambers. These aren’t open stages where you perform for strangers; they’re private spaces where you can rent a room by the hour, close the door, and sing your lungs out without any audience at all if that’s what you need.
You can go completely alone—no friends, no public, no judgment—just you, a microphone, a screen with lyrics, and whatever emotional release you need to achieve. Belt out power ballads. Scream through rock anthems. Whisper sad love songs. No one can hear you. No one is watching. It’s pure cathartic release.
In a society with strong social hierarchies, grueling work hours, and cultural pressure to maintain chemyeon (체면) – face or dignity – in public, these private karaoke rooms serve as essential decompression chambers. They’re where the mask comes off, where you don’t have to be the dutiful employee or the respectful junior or the capable adult—you can just be someone releasing steam by singing out loud, alone, in a soundproofed box that asks nothing of you except your presence.
6. Plastic Surgery: The National Sport of Good Looking
In South Korea, plastic surgery isn’t whispered about or hidden—it’s a national sport, discussed as casually as someone might talk about getting a haircut or joining a gym. It’s so normalized that kids receive plastic surgery as graduation gifts, birthday presents, or rewards for finishing high school.
The most common procedure? Double eyelid surgery. Most Asians naturally have monolids (single eyelids), but in Korea, having double eyelids has become a sign of beauty, modernity, even emancipation. Some estimates suggest that nearly half of South Korean population have had this procedure done—a staggering statistic that speaks to how deeply beauty standards have penetrated the culture.
Walk through any Korean neighborhood, particularly in areas like Gangnam in Seoul, and you’ll regularly see women traveling around with bandages covering their faces—post-surgery recovery worn as openly as a sports injury. There’s no shame in it. No attempt to hide it. The bandages are almost a badge of commitment to self-improvement, visible evidence of investment in one’s appearance.
This isn’t vanity in the Western sense—it’s economic pragmatism in a hyper-competitive society where appearance can genuinely affect job prospects, marriage opportunities, and social mobility. In a country where your photo is routinely required on job applications and first impressions carry enormous weight, plastic surgery is often viewed not as frivolous indulgence but as strategic career investment—a way to level the playing field in a society that openly judges books by their covers.
7. Hangul: The Alphabet Designed for Democracy
The Korean alphabet, Hangul (??), was invented in the 15th century by King Sejong the Great—and it represents one of history’s most intentional acts of linguistic democratization. Before Hangul, Korea relied entirely on Chinese characters for written communication, which meant literacy was essentially restricted to the educated elite who could afford years of study to master thousands of complex ideograms.
King Sejong recognized this as a barrier to social progress and deliberately created an alphabet system so logical and intuitive that, as the story goes, “a wise man can acquaint himself with them before the morning is over; even a stupid man can learn them in the space of ten days.”
Hangul is built on visual logic—the shapes of the letters actually represent the physical position of the tongue, lips, and throat when making those sounds. For example:
ㄱ (g/k sound) – the letter’s shape mimics the back of the tongue touching the soft palate
ㄴ (n sound) – represents the tongue touching the roof of the mouth
ㅁ (m sound) – shows the closed mouth position
ㅏ (ah sound) – the vertical line represents the upright human body, with the horizontal mark indicating where sound originates
You combine these into blocks to form syllables. The word “Hangul” itself (한글) is written with two syllable blocks: 한 (han) and 글 (geul).
This systematization had a big impact on Korean society, by eliminating their linguistic reliance on Chinese characters. It wasn’t just about reading and writing—it was about intellectual independence, cultural identity, and giving common people access to knowledge that had been gatekept by an aristocratic class for centuries. King Sejong didn’t just create an alphabet; he engineered a tool for social mobility.
There are many other things that could be mentioned here, from the amazing street food you’ll find in Myeongdong-ro, the pharmacy level cleanliness of the subway (which has its platform completely isolated by plexiglass panels, so no one can jump on the rails), up to the incredible Haeinsa temple in the South – to mention just some of the things I experienced directly.