
Global trade chaos threatens South Korea's ‘survival' says Lee Jae-myung in inauguration speech
South Korea's new president, Lee Jae-myung, has warned that rapid changes in the global order and rising protectionism pose a threat to his country's survival, as he promised to pursue 'dialogue and cooperation' with North Korea.
'The rapid changes in the global order such as rising protectionism and supply chain restructuring pose a threat to our very survival,' Lee said in an inaugural address, in an apparent reference to the global trade chaos sparked by US President Donald Trump's sweeping tariffs.
In the speech made just hours after he was declared winner of Tuesday's presidential election, Lee said he would bolster a trilateral partnership with the US and Japan.
He said his government would deal with potential North Korean aggressions with 'a strong deterrence' based on the solid South Korea-US military alliance. But he would also leave the door open for dialogue with North Korea and establish peace on the Korean Peninsula.
Lee, who rose from childhood poverty to become South Korea's leading liberal politician vowing to fight inequality and corruption, won the election on Tuesday that was triggered by the removal of former President Yoon Suk Yeol over his ill-fated imposition of martial law late last year.
Lee's term began immediately, without the usual two-month transition period after the National Election Commission formally confirmed his victory on Wednesday morning.
In a telephone call with the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff, Kim Myung-soo, Lee asked the military to closely monitor North Korean moves and maintain a solid readiness based on the combined South Korea-US military alliance, according to local TV footage.
Lee later visited the national cemetery in Seoul to pay his respects to the late Korean leaders, patriots and war dead who are buried there.
Lee assumes office with a bulging in-tray, from a deepening economic slump and global trade war, to mounting concerns over military ties between nuclear-armed North Korea and Russia.
Just hours after Lee took office, South Korea's crucial steel and aluminium exports were set to be hit by steep US levies of 50%, after Trump announced a rise in the tariffs imposed by his administration last week.
With Reuters, Agence France-Presse and the Associated Press
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
41 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Candidate emerges as HSBC hunts for new chairman
A former McKinsey boss turned Goldman Sachs banker has been tipped to replace Mark Tucker as chairman of HSBC. City sources told the Mail that Scottish-born Kevin Sneader has been approached about taking Tucker's job when he leaves in September to become chairman of Hong Kong-based insurer AIA. Sneader, 59, left his job as boss of management consultant giant McKinsey in 2021 following a string of crises. He is now president of Asia-Pacific at Goldman Sachs. It was announced last month that Tucker, 67, would retire by the end of 2025, ending an eight-year tenure at the helm of the bank's board. AIA confirmed he would start his role as non-executive chairman on October 1 – a move that sees him return to the group he led as chief executive for seven years until 2017.


The Independent
2 hours ago
- The Independent
North Korea says it refloated capsized destroyer after Kim Jong Un's anger
North Korea says it has righted a capsized destroyer and moored it in a northeastern port, continuing repairs on the warship deemed a key asset by Kim Jong Un. The restoration, expected to be completed before a major party congress in late June, follows a botched launching ceremony in May that triggered Kim Jong Un 's anger and led to the detention of several officials. South Korea's military assesses that North Korea righted the ship earlier in the week and is conducting drainage operations while examining the damage. The damaged warship is North Korea 's second destroyer and is seen as crucial for modernising its naval forces, potentially boosting its offensive and defensive capabilities with advanced missile and radar systems. Experts suggest the destroyer was likely built with Russian assistance, reflecting deepening military cooperation between North Korea and Russia amid the war in Ukraine, raising concerns about technology transfers that could enhance North Korea 's military capabilities.


Times
3 hours ago
- Times
China surpasses German engineering with world's tallest wind turbine
Other countries compete to build the tallest skyscraper, or the biggest Ferris wheel. China and Germany are more serious about their engineering: they compete for the prize of having the biggest wind turbine. One of China's two leading wind turbine companies, Dongfang Electric, announced on Friday it had completed a key test on the latest machine that, when it goes into service shortly, will break that record. Standing 340 metres from its base in the Pacific, off the coast of the country's Fujian province, to the tip of its blades when they rotate to their highest points, it will be the first wind turbine to be taller than the Eiffel Tower. Dongfang — meaning the East — said it had finished load testing a prototype blade for the turbine, itself 150 metres long. 'We're harnessing the power of tech to plant the seeds of a greener future,' it said in celebration. 'Every blade carries a low-carbon dream, ready to catch the wind and grow strong.' China under President Xi has put huge economic weight on not only an ever-expanding industrial base but also being at the forefront of green technologies. With no room for political opposition, and a heavy continuing reliance nationally on coal and other fossil fuels at the same time, there is little of the public debate around wind power that western European companies have faced. China already makes more than 80 per cent of the world's solar panels. Its low cost base — unfairly subsidised, according to western rivals — is also undercutting and starting to dominate American and European production in wind power too. A worker at the Dongfang factory operates a robotic arm At present the wind turbine claimed to be the world's highest was constructed by another Chinese company, Mingyang, and operates off the southern Chinese island of Hainan. Its hub is at the same height as Dongfang's — 185 metres off the ground — but its blades are a few metres shorter. A similarly sized turbine is already operating at the site to which the Dongfang blades are believed to be heading, the Fujian Fuzhou Offshore Wind Power Industrial Park. Its maximum capacity is 18MW of electricity, and the Hainan turbine is 20MW, which the new turbine will surpass by 6MW. According to estimates, that will be enough at average 10 metres per second windspeeds to power 55,000 homes on its own. Britain's tallest wind turbines — at the Longhill Burn Wind Farm in West Lothian, Scotland — stand up to 150m tall. The blades reach as high as 200m. How long any of these three monsters maintain their dominance is unclear. As Germany tries to reclaim its traditional global leadership in engineering — and tries to stave off Chinese competition — its companies are also building higher. A turbine being designed and built by Gicon, a German conglomerate, will stand at 363 metres from toe to the tip of the vertical blade. It, however, is based on a novel design, in which smaller blades rotate from a 300-metre high lattice structure itself influenced by the design of the Eiffel Tower. It will, however, be the second highest man-made object in Germany, after the Berlin TV Tower.