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China's embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Chiu's remarks.
The only woman to have served as chief justice, Karki was the preferred choice of the protesters who cite her
Israel attempted to kill the political leaders of Hamas with an airstrike on Doha on Tuesday, in what U.S. officials
The sweeping U.N. review comes over a decade after a landmark U.N. report found that North Korea had committed crimes
"Thanks to this cooperation (with BAE Systems), we will have state-of-the-art technology, thanks to which we will be able to
According to the arrest affidavit, the violence erupted after a minor dispute earlier that morning.
Images and analyses shared by the Yale Humanitarian Research Lab showed 13 "delta-wing" drones alongside launching gear near Nyala airport
The new sanctions target 70 additional ships allegedly transporting Russian oil and 30 companies and individuals accused of supplying equipment
Under the proposed framework, asylum seekers would be required to claim protection in the first country they enter, not a
South Korean businesses, facing challenges securing long-term visas for specialist staff, have relied on U.S. visa grey areas, prompting talks

Home Taiwan Warns China Preparing For War; Fall Risks Domino Effect

Taiwan Warns China Preparing For War; Fall Risks Domino Effect

In a sharp warning from Washington on Friday, Taiwan’s top China policymaker said Beijing is actively preparing for war to seize the island — and cautioned that Taiwan’s fall could trigger a “domino effect” across the region, endangering even US security.

Chiu Chui-cheng, the cabinet-ranked head of Taiwan’s Mainland Affairs Council, told the Washington-based Heritage Foundation that China’s ruling Communist Party had long refused to renounce the use of force against democratically governed Taiwan, which it considers to be part of its territory.

He added that Beijing “has been actively preparing for war”, and highlighted stepped-up Chinese military activity around the island.

“If Taiwan were to be taken over by China by force, it will trigger a domino effect, undermine the regional balance of power, and directly threaten the security and prosperity of the United States,” Chiu said.

The United States is Taiwan’s most important international backer and arms supplier, despite the lack of formal diplomatic ties.
Taiwan’s government rejects Beijing’s sovereignty claims, saying only the island’s people can decide their future.

While senior Taiwanese officials visit the United States, such trips are much rarer than for major US allies and generally much more low profile.

China’s embassy in Washington did not immediately respond to a request for comment on Chiu’s remarks.

On Thursday, Chiu spoke to the House Select Committee on the Chinese Communist Party on countering Chinese disinformation and strengthening Taiwan-US ties, committee chairman John Moolenaar wrote on X.

Chinese Carrier Nears Taiwan

China’s most advanced aircraft carrier, the Fujian, recently passed through the sensitive Taiwan Strait into the South China Sea during its sea trials.

The Chinese navy said in a statement on Friday that the journey was made to conduct scientific research trials and training missions. First unveiled in 2022, the country’s third aircraft carrier began sea trials last year and has yet to formally enter service.

“This cross-regional trial and training exercise for the Fujian is a routine arrangement in the carrier’s construction process and is not directed at any specific target,” it added.

The sailing comes as US Marines and Japanese counterparts stage a fortnight of exercises on the nearby island of Okinawa with the Typhon missile system and other advanced anti-ship weapons. The exercises are due to run until September 25.

Japan’s defence ministry said late on Thursday that the Fujian had entered the East China Sea, sailing southwest toward Taiwan, accompanied by two Chinese missile destroyers.

Taiwan Monitoring Situation

Taiwan’s defence ministry said it has been monitoring the situation with joint intelligence surveillance and has taken appropriate measures.

China has, over the past five years or so, stepped up its military presence around Taiwan, including staging war games, to assert its sovereignty claims.

Taiwan’s government rejects Beijing’s sovereignty, saying only the island’s people can decide their future.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home Sushila Karki Becomes Nepal’s First Woman Leader

Sushila Karki Becomes Nepal’s First Woman Leader

In a historic development for Nepal, former Chief Justice Sushila Karki was sworn in as the country’s interim leader on Friday, becoming the first woman to hold the position.

Her appointment comes after Prime Minister K.P. Sharma Oli resigned amid widespread and violent anti-corruption protests, the president’s office confirmed.

President Ramchandra Paudel’s office announced Karki’s appointment following negotiations between Paudel, army chief Ashok Raj Sigdel and the protesters who led Nepal’s worst upheaval in years.

Widespread Violence

Fifty-one people were killed and more than 1,300 injured this week in the anti-graft protests by the ‘Gen Z’ movement, named for the age of its mainly young supporters.

The protest was sparked by a social media ban that has since been rolled back. The violence subsided only after Oli resigned on Tuesday.

Karki, 73, took the oath of office at 9:15 p.m. local time (1530 GMT).

The only woman to have served as chief justice, Karki was the preferred choice of the protesters who cite her reputation for honesty and integrity and a stance against corruption.

She held the top judicial post for about a year until mid-2017.

Restoration Of Normalcy

Nepal has grappled with political and economic instability since the abolition of its monarchy in 2008, while a lack of jobs drives millions to seek work in other countries and send money home.

As the country of 30 million people inched back to normality on Friday – with shops reopened, cars back on roads, and police replacing the guns they wielded earlier this week with batons – families reclaimed bodies of those killed in the protests.

Some roads were still blocked, although streets were patrolled by fewer soldiers than before.

“While his friends backed off (from the protests), he decided to go ahead,” Karuna Budhathoki said of her 23-year-old nephew, as she waited to collect his body at Kathmandu’s Teaching Hospital. “We were told he was brought dead to the hospital.”

Another protester who died, Ashab Alam Thakurai, 24, had been married only a month earlier, his relatives said.

“The last we spoke to him … he said he was stuck with the protest. After that we could not contact him … eventually we found him in the morgue,” said his uncle, Zulfikar Alam.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home Marco Rubio To Travel To Israel As Strains Grow Among U.S. Middle East Allies

Marco Rubio To Travel To Israel As Strains Grow Among U.S. Middle East Allies

Marco Rubio, the chief diplomat in President Donald Trump’s administration, is scheduled to visit Israel this weekend as Washington faces strains with its Middle East allies following Israel’s attack on Hamas leaders in Qatar and its ongoing settlement expansion in the occupied West Bank.

State Department deputy spokesperson Tommy Pigott said on Friday that Rubio would depart on Saturday to visit Israel before joining up with Trump’s planned visit to Britain next week.

Rubio in Israel will emphasize Washington and Israel’s shared goals, Pigott said in a statement, citing the need to ensure Hamas never rules Gaza again and the return of hostages taken in the October 7, 2023, attacks on Israel by terrorists that killed 1,200 people and resulted in the capture of 251 hostages, according to Israeli figures.

Israel’s nearly two-year-long campaign in response has killed more than 64,000 people in the Palestinian enclave, according to local authorities. It has also led to allegations Israel is committing genocide, including this month by the world’s biggest group of genocide scholars.

Israel attempted to kill the political leaders of Hamas with an airstrike on Doha on Tuesday, in what U.S. officials described as a unilateral escalation that did not serve American or Israeli interests.

The strike on the territory of a close U.S. ally sparked broad condemnation from other Arab states and derailed ceasefire and hostage talks brokered by Qatar.

Palestinian Statehood

Rubio’s visit comes ahead of high-level meetings at the United Nations in New York later this month, where countries including France and Britain are expected to recognize Palestinian statehood.

Washington says such recognition would bolster Hamas and Rubio has suggested the move could spur the annexation of the West Bank sought by hardline members of the Israeli government.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu signed an agreement on Thursday to push ahead with a settlement expansion plan that would cut across West Bank land that the Palestinians seek for a state.

The United Arab Emirates warned last week that doing so would cross a red line and undermine the U.S.-brokered Abraham Accords that normalized UAE-Israel relations in 2020.

Rubio and Israeli leaders will discuss “our commitment to fight anti-Israel actions including unilateral recognition of a Palestinian state that rewards Hamas terrorism, and lawfare at the ICC and ICJ,” Pigott said.

He was referring to the International Criminal Court, which has issued a warrant for Netanyahu’s arrest, and the International Court of Justice, which has ordered Israel to take action to prevent acts of genocide.

“The Secretary will also meet with the families of hostages and underscore that their relatives’ return remains a top priority,” Pigott said.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home North Korea Intensifies Repression Through Surveillance, Executions: UN Report

North Korea Intensifies Repression Through Surveillance, Executions: UN Report

Repression in North Korea has intensified in multiple areas, with increased surveillance, expanded forced labour, and more frequent executions, making it the world’s most restrictive country, according to a U.N. human rights report released on Friday.

The sweeping U.N. review comes over a decade after a landmark U.N. report found that North Korea had committed crimes against humanity.

The new report, covering developments since 2014, is based on interviews with more than 300 witnesses and victims who fled the country and reported a further erosion of freedoms.

Surveillance has grown more pervasive with the help of new technologies, while punishments have become harsher — including the introduction of the death penalty for offences such as sharing foreign TV dramas, the report said.

“Under laws, policies and practices introduced since 2015, citizens have been subjected to increased surveillance and control in all parts of life,” the 14-page U.N. report said in its conclusion. “No other population is under such restrictions in today’s world,” it said.

North Korea’s Geneva diplomatic mission and its London embassy did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The DPRK said in response to U.N. rights investigators that it rejected a U.N. Human Rights Council resolution which authorised the latest report.

The report also found some limited improvements, such as reduced use of violence by guards in detention facilities, and new laws that appear to strengthen fair trial guarantees.

North Korean Nepotism

Kim Jong Un seems to have further cemented the status of his daughter, Kim Ju Ae, as his probable successor after she joined him during a visit to China, South Korean lawmakers said on Thursday, quoting information provided by the nation’s intelligence agency.

Ju Ae stayed at the North Korean embassy and avoided the public spotlight during the Beijing visit, but just being on the overseas trip with her father was “enough to build a narrative” as the regime’s likely successor, said Lee Seong-kweun, a lawmaker on South Korea’s parliamentary intelligence committee.

“It was suggested that Kim Ju Ae’s status was solidified as a likely successor by showing her occasionally, while enabling her to build overseas experience but not to appear at public events,” said Park Sun-won, another lawmaker on the committee.

Also, North Korean officials were spotted wiping out traces in order not to expose the biological information of Kim and his daughter during the China trip. This included using a special plane to transport garbage and the pair staying at the North Korean embassy, South Korea’s spy agency told the lawmakers.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home British Company BAE Systems To Assist Poland In Producing 155 mm Ammunition Rounds

British Company BAE Systems To Assist Poland In Producing 155 mm Ammunition Rounds

Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk announced on Friday that Britain’s BAE Systems will cooperate with Poland in manufacturing 155 mm ammunition, a type of heavy artillery shell that has been scarce in Ukraine and across NATO allies.

Poland is leading a European push to boost its defence readiness to deter any possible attack from Russia and is spending 2.4 billion zlotys ($660 million) for a project to build three ammunition factories.

“Thanks to this cooperation (with BAE Systems), we will have state-of-the-art technology, thanks to which we will be able to dramatically increase the production of 155 mm rounds,” Tusk said in the Dezamet factory in Nowa Deba in southern Poland.

“This cooperation is only part of a larger project… we should achieve an annual production level of approximately 130,000 rounds in Poland within two years.”

Ammunition Shortage In Ukraine

Western nations are trying to boost output of ammunition such as artillery shells because Ukraine has been using such supplies much faster than allies can produce them.

The 155mm shell and its Russian equivalent combine the explosive power and extended range needed to destroy armour and inflict casualties.

Tusk also said he would talk to NATO’s secretary general on Friday to discuss further steps by the alliance to protect its eastern flank after Russian drone incursions into Polish airspace this week.

BAE Systems said its technology would be licenced to Polska Grupa Zbrojeniowa (PGZ) as part of a strategic partnership deal initially worth tens of millions of pounds, but involving further returns for BAE as it receives licence fees for the next 40 years.

Work on building the new munitions factory in Poland will start later this year and should be completed by the end of 2027 or early 2028, BAE said.

The factory will operate using BAE’s automated technology, which is helping Britain lift its own production capacity.

BAE’s Maritime & Land Defence Solutions managing director, Scott Jamieson, said the tie-up had been in the works for some time and that this type of agreement was about establishing a “kind of new approach” as “threats change by the week.”

BAE is working to secure similar licencing deals in other European countries in what is a competetive area, he said.

($1 = 3.6342 zlotys)

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home Indian Man Chased, Beheaded In Front Of Family In US Motel

Indian Man Chased, Beheaded In Front Of Family In US Motel

An Indian man from Karnataka, 50-year-old Chandra Nagamallaiah, was savagely murdered at a Dallas motel by Yordanis Cobos-Martinez, a 37-year-old Cuban immigrant with a violent criminal history who had recently been released from custody.

Nagamallaiah, who managed the Downtown Suites motel on Samuell Boulevard, east of Downtown Dallas, was attacked with a machete in a horrific assault that ended with his beheading.

Chilling CCTV footage shows Cobos-Martinez chasing Nagamallaiah through the motel corridor while repeatedly striking him with the weapon.

The victim’s desperate screams brought his wife and 18-year-old son rushing to his aid, but despite their repeated attempts to stop the assailant, they were forcefully pushed away. At one point, Nagamallaiah’s son appeared with a baseball bat, but by then his father was already motionless from the brutal attack.

Chilling Video

The video captures Cobos-Martinez rifling through the victim’s pockets before continuing his frenzied assault, during which Nagamallaiah was beheaded.

In another disturbing angle, the assailant is seen kicking the severed head like a football, later picking it up and disposing of it in a dumpster. When Nagamallaiah’s wife tried once more to intervene, Cobos-Martinez advanced menacingly toward her, forcing her son to drag her away from the horrific scene.

According to the arrest affidavit, the violence erupted after a minor dispute earlier that morning.

A witness told police she was cleaning a room with Cobos-Martinez when Nagamallaiah asked them not to use a broken washing machine. Cobos-Martinez reportedly grew angry because the victim asked her to translate rather than address him directly. The confrontation escalated into the deadly machete attack.

Another eyewitness told CBS Texas that Cobos-Martinez chased the victim “from 108 all the way to the office,” as Nagamallaiah desperately tried to reach safety and alert his family.

Police later confirmed that after the beheading, Cobos-Martinez kicked the victim’s head twice into the parking lot before dumping it into a trash container.

History Sheeter

When Dallas Fire-Rescue arrived, responders spotted the suspect covered in blood and still carrying the machete. They followed him until police officers managed to apprehend him. Cobos-Martinez, with prior arrests in Houston for auto theft and assault, is now in custody without bond and faces possible life imprisonment without parole or even the death penalty.

The Consulate General of India in Houston expressed condolences and confirmed it is assisting the grieving family. “We are in touch with the family and offering all possible assistance. The accused is in Dallas Police custody,” the consulate posted on X.

Known affectionately as Bob to friends and loved ones, Nagamallaiah is remembered as a devoted husband, caring father, and kind-hearted individual whose tragic death has left the community in shock. Friends described the killing as “sudden, deeply traumatic, and unimaginably brutal,” especially since it unfolded in front of his wife and son.

The local Indian community has rallied around the family, setting up a fundraiser to cover funeral costs, immediate expenses, and to support Nagamallaiah’s son’s college education. His funeral is scheduled for Saturday.

(With inputs from IBNS)

Home Sighting Of Long-Range ‘Kamikaze’ Drones Near RSF Base Seen As New Threat In Sudan Conflict

Sighting Of Long-Range ‘Kamikaze’ Drones Near RSF Base Seen As New Threat In Sudan Conflict

During a major airstrike on army-held territory in May, more than a dozen long-range kamikaze drones were spotted close to an airport under the control of Sudan’s Rapid Support Forces, suggesting the paramilitary group has acquired new weapons that could shift the trajectory of the conflict.

The conflict between the RSF and Sudan’s army has created the world’s worst humanitarian crisis over the past two-and-a-half years, drawing in myriad foreign interests, and threatening to fragment the strategic Red Sea country, a major gold producer.

Images and analyses shared by the Yale Humanitarian Research Lab showed 13 “delta-wing” drones alongside launching gear near Nyala airport in Sudan’s western Darfur region on May 6 this year.

Long-Range Drones

Such drones, which are designed to crash into their targets, typically have a range of about 2,000 km (1,200 miles), a range that would reach anywhere in Sudan and far further than any other models the RSF was previously known to possess.

Yale assessed it was one of two possible Chinese models. Similar models are also produced by companies in Russia and Iran.

China’s foreign ministry denied having any knowledge of the kamikaze drones. “China has always adopted a prudent and responsible attitude in military exports, and has consistently and conscientiously implemented relevant Security Council resolutions and fulfilled (our) own international obligations,” a spokesperson said.

The appearance of the drones and 16 launch platforms near the Nyala airport overlapped with a barrage of drone attacks on Port Sudan, which took place between May 3 and May 9. The researchers said the drones were gone by May 9 while the platforms remained visible until early September.

At the time, some analysts speculated that the attack on the army’s wartime capital around 1,600 km from Nyala may have been launched from areas to the east of Sudan as the RSF was not known to have such capabilities.

Sudan Accuses UAE

Sudan accused the United Arab Emirates of carrying out the attacks using warplanes and kamikaze drones launched from an Emirati base on the Red Sea. The UAE denied the allegations and has repeatedly denied accusations it supports the RSF.

After initially relying on ground incursions, the RSF has ramped up its air capabilities and increasingly relied on drone attacks since losing territory in Sudan’s center and east earlier this year.

The paramilitary group launched drone attacks on the capital Khartoum this week in what it said was a response to attacks by the military on civilians elsewhere in Sudan, though it was not clear what models were used in the strikes.

Analyses by the defence intelligence company Janes and Wim Zwijnenburg of Dutch peace organisation Pax confirmed the May images showed long-range delta-wing suicide drones, similar to models produced in several countries that have ranges of approximately 2,000 km.

On Thursday it reiterated allegations that the army had targeted civilians in drone attacks. The army has denied the allegations.

Earlier in the year, three Chinese-manufactured CH-95 drones with a strike distance of up to 200 km at Nyala airport were reported. At the time, the RSF was frequently launching drone attacks on closer-range targets including fuel depots, dams, and military bases across areas controlled by the Sudanese army.

The Sudanese army has repeatedly targeted Nyala airport and its surroundings, including with strikes earlier this week.

The Yale researchers did not determine how the drones may have reached Darfur. Since the early 2000s, the Darfur region has been under an arms embargo that has been frequently violated.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home UK Imposes New Russia-Linked Sanctions On Shadow Fleet, Arms Suppliers

UK Imposes New Russia-Linked Sanctions On Shadow Fleet, Arms Suppliers

Britain on Friday unveiled a new set of Russia-related sanctions targeting vessels transporting Russian oil, along with companies and individuals providing electronics, chemicals, and explosives used in Russian weapons production.

The package was a response to recent Russian aggression, the British government said in a statement, referring to the higher numbers of Russian drone and missile attacks on Ukraine in recent months, and the violation of NATO airspace over Poland on Wednesday.

The announcement, delivered by new UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper during her visit to Kyiv, comes at a time when Vladimir Putin is escalating hostilities rather than engaging in peace efforts, having recently launched the largest air assault of the war against Ukraine, unleashing more than 800 missiles and drones in a single night.

Intensified Russian Strikes

The scale of Russia’s attacks has intensified dramatically, with 6,500 drones and missiles launched against Ukraine in July alone — a figure ten times higher than last year — with recent strikes directly hitting the Ukrainian cabinet of ministers, damaging the British Council and EU delegation offices in Kyiv, and even violating NATO airspace over Poland.

“International action to increase economic pressure on Russia and to cut off critical cash flows which he desperately needs to pay for this illegal war is vital,” Cooper said as she visited Kyiv on Friday.

“These sanctions form the next stage in the UK’s leading efforts to ramp up economic pressure alongside our security support.”

The new sanctions target 70 more ships that Britain said were being used to transport Russian oil, and 30 companies and individuals that it said were involved in supplying the Russian military with kit used in weapons systems, including one China-based electronics firm and one located in Turkey.

Russia’s embassy in London did not immediately respond to a request for comment, while China’s embassy said it had made “serious representations” to Britain, objecting to the sanctions against three Chinese entities.

“These sanctions are unilateral actions without any basis in international law. They undermine the legitimate rights and interests of Chinese enterprises,” a spokesperson said.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home Trump Administration Seeks UN Measures To Limit Global Asylum Rights

Trump Administration Seeks UN Measures To Limit Global Asylum Rights

Documents reveal that U.S. President Donald Trump‘s administration intends to push for significantly limiting the right to asylum at the United Nations later this month, aiming to roll back the post-World War II humanitarian protection framework.

State Department officials sketched out plans for an event later this month on the sidelines of the U.N.’s annual general assembly meeting that would call for reframing the global approach to asylum and immigration to reflect Trump’s restrictive stance, according to two internal planning documents reviewed by Reuters and a State Department spokesperson.

Under the proposed framework, asylum seekers would be required to claim protection in the first country they enter, not a nation of their choosing, the spokesperson said. Asylum would be temporary, and the host country would decide whether conditions in their home country had improved enough to return, a major shift from how asylum works in the U.S. and elsewhere.

Trump’s administration has already rewritten the U.S. approach to immigration, prioritising white South Africans for entry and forcefully detaining those in the country illegally. With the U.N. event, Trump would be taking that restrictive vision global, urging its adoption by the world body that established the international legal framework for the right to seek asylum.

One of the documents describes migration as “a defining challenge for the world in the 21st century” and says asylum “is routinely abused to enable economic migration.” It calls for reforming the global approach to migration worldwide and greatly limiting the ability of people to seek asylum.

Mark Hetfield, president of the refugee resettlement group HIAS, defended the existing global agreements as ensuring people would never be subject to persecution without an escape route.

“Right now, if someone comes to the border of any country because they are fleeing for their lives on the basis of race, religion, nationality, social group or political opinion, they have the right to protection,” Hetfield said. “If it were to change, we’d be back to the situation we were in during the Holocaust.”

Deputy Secretary of State Christopher Landau would lead the side event at the U.N., according to the planning document.

In a Senate confirmation hearing on Thursday, Andrew Veprek, Trump’s nominee to run the State Department’s refugee division, called for reshaping the global approach to asylum.

“Perhaps the most important root cause of the mass and illegal migration today is the abuse of refugee and asylum systems,” Veprek said. “The current framework of international agreements and norms on migration developed after the Second World War in a completely different geopolitical and economic context. It cannot be expected to function in our modern world, and indeed it does not.”

Shift In The US Approach To Migration

Adoption of the plan would mark a stunning shift in the global order for migration, going beyond Trump’s hardline approach in his 2017-2021 presidency.

Global compacts signed by most of the world’s countries in 1951 and 1967 established a framework for someone fleeing persecution to seek asylum at another country’s borders. The U.S. and other nations in recent years have begun to adopt more restrictive stances.

The U.S. could not unilaterally scrap the global refugee pacts, however, and while some like-minded governments may support the effort, there have been no signs of broad support for a worldwide realignment.

At a meeting of the State Department’s Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration on Tuesday, top Trump refugee official Spencer Chretien said the Trump administration would seek to replace the decades-old global accords and “build a new framework,” according to meeting notes shared with Reuters.

Bureau staff were told the group itself, already gutted as part of mass layoffs at the State Department in July, would refocus on migration diplomacy and disaster response rather than its traditional refugee focus.

Chretien said the top goal for the bureau – set by the highest levels of the White House – would be resettling white South Africans from the country’s Dutch-descended Afrikaner minority.

“This is our overriding objective,” Chretien said, according to the notes. “And frankly, we’re under a good amount of pressure to ramp up the pace of this program and produce arrivals quickly.”

Trump froze refugee admissions from countries around the world when he took office in January, but weeks later called for Afrikaners to be prioritised. The first group of 59 South Africans arrived in May.

As of Monday, 138 in total had arrived, one U.S. official said, requesting anonymity to discuss internal figures.

Reuters reported in August that Trump officials were discussing setting a refugee admission ceiling of 40,000 people in fiscal year 2026 with a heavy focus on Afrikaners. The administration has since discussed a ceiling as high as 60,000, the U.S. official said.

An internal document drafted by officials in the State Department and the U.S. Health and Human Services Department in April suggested the Trump administration could also prioritise bringing in Europeans as refugees if they were targeted for expressing certain views, such as opposition to mass migration or support for populist political parties.

(With inputs from Reuters)

Home South Korean Workers Return Home A Week After US Immigration Raid

South Korean Workers Return Home A Week After US Immigration Raid

Around 300 South Korean workers reunited with their families on Friday, a week after being detained in a large U.S. immigration raid that left many uncertain about returning to work in the country.

Wearing face masks, they disembarked a chartered plane at Incheon airport and were greeted with cheers from officials, including the presidential chief of staff, before being taken by bus to meet family members.

Their return capped a week of intense negotiations by Seoul to win their release and bring them home after they were taken into custody in handcuffs and shackles – images that shocked many in South Korea, a key U.S. ally.

South Korean businesses have long struggled with obtaining proper visas for specialist staff needed at project sites for months at a time, which has led to some workers relying on grey areas in U.S. visa enforcement.

The two countries are looking at establishing a working group to consider a new type of visa for Koreans, according to South Korea’s foreign minister, who visited Washington this week.

Presidential chief of staff, Kang Hoon-sik, said he had come to the airport to highlight how seriously President Lee Jae Myung was taking the incident that had affected “innocent people of Korea.”

“We’re in an age of new normal in dealing with the United States,” Kang told reporters.

“The standard changes every time, and constantly there has to be deal-making, not only on tariffs, but it’ll also be the case with security issues,” he said.

The workers were met by family members and officials at LG Energy Solution (LGES) and its subcontractors.

The battery company is partnering with Hyundai Motor to build the plant in the U.S. state of Georgia.

The raid has threatened to destabilise ties at a time when the countries are seeking to finalise a trade deal, which includes a $350 billion investment fund to support strategic U.S. industries.

In one sign of resentment, at the arrival gate, a man unfurled a large poster depicting U.S. President Donald Trump wearing an outfit with the initials of the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement service and carrying a bag full of dollar bills with a machine gun slung across his chest. The caption read: “We’re friends!”
Police later forced the poster owner to move away from the arrival gate.

Not A Simple Transport

Returning workers said they were horrified by the September 4 raid conducted jointly by U.S. immigration authorities, the FBI and the Justice Department’s Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives that rounded up 475 workers at the plant’s site.

“It started to look serious because we thought we would be taking the transport vehicle, but then they started putting handcuffs and shackles, and that’s when we thought ‘Oh, this is not going to be a simple transport,'” LG Energy Solution engineer Choi Young-hee said.

In a sign that Washington recognises the importance of South Korean investment and the skills of the country’s workers needed to get plants operational, Trump, earlier this week, offered to allow the workers to stay in the United States to train Americans.

Asked about the overture, Jang Young-seol, an engineer for an LGES subcontractor, said he’d need to think long and hard about it.

“Nobody is going to stay and work when it’s like this,” he said.

President Lee Jae Myung warned on Thursday that the incident could make South Korean companies hesitant about investing in the U.S at a time when Trump has been seeking to encourage foreign investment in manufacturing.

Hyundai has said that the plant is facing a minimum startup delay of two to three months following the immigration raid. The plant, part of a $7.6 billion factory complex to make battery-powered models, was slated to come online later this year.

The returning workers included 10 from China, three from Japan and an Indonesian national.

(With inputs from Reuters)