
'Remove Xi Jinping collection': Man arrested for SNU library disturbance
Man caused disturbance with a baton, demanding removal of room of books, DVDs about China
A man in his 40s has been arrested for a violent outburst at a library in Seoul National University, demanding the removal of a collection named after Chinese President Xi Jinping.
He is being held on suspicion of possessing a dangerous weapon in public area without justifiable reason, special violence and special intimidation — "special" is used for aggravated offences involving a weapon — according to Seoul Gwanak Police Station.
The suspect is accused of a violent act at around 12:15 p.m. last Friday at the Central Library of the SNU, specifically at the Xi Jinping Collection Room on the fourth floor, which consists of China focused books and other materials.
He purportedly shouted, "Why is a Xi Jinping archive here?" and argued that the room should immediately be closed. The suspect was found in possession of another weapon by police, who arrested him on site after shooting him with a stun gun.
No injuries occurred due to the incident. It was found that the suspect was not a member of the school, and had not been intoxicated at the time of the crime.
A warrant for his continued arrest was issued by local court Sunday and authorizes the suspect to be detained for further investigation for up to 10 days by the police, though prosecutors can hold him for longer.
The Xi Jinping room of the library in SNU, widely considered the most prestigious university in South Korea, opened in 2015, with 9,297 books and 755 DVDs about China and ethnic Chinese living here that Xi pledged to donate in his 2014 visit here, under administration of ex-President Park Geun-hye.
Anti-China sentiment
Officials are investigating exactly why the suspect committed the crime, but researches indicate that anti-China sentiment here in recent years remains fairly high, although possibly not as high as few years ago.
Hankook Research has conducted annual surveys on South Korean sentiment toward China since 2023. In 2024, it showed that 30 percent of respondents regarded China as an enemy while only 8 percent regarded it as a friend. This was lower than 44 percent thinking of the country as an enemy in the 2023 survey. The vast majority of those who responded thought that the country was neither friend or foe to South Korea.
In the 2025 survey, 46 percent of the respondent said that Seoul-Beijing relations were neither good or bad, as opposed to 45 percent who thought it was bad. It indicated that anti-China sentiment was not as bad as in 2023, when 73 percent of the respondents thought the relations between two countries was bad and 20 percent said it was neither good or bad.
A small percentage of respondents thought South Korea had good relations with China, at 2 percent in both 2023 and 2024, rising to 6 percent in 2025.
While not as high as before, the 2025 survey indicated that the majority of people here regarded China as a threat to the reunification of the Koreas, national security and the economy, 63 percent, 60 percent, and 51 percent, respectively.
In a possibly related incident, a 42-year-old Korean dressed up as Marvel Comics character Captain America attempted to gain unauthorized access to the Chinese Embassy in Seoul in February.
He later said his actions were intended to demonstrate the anti-China sentiment in the country.
The man, who turned out to be supporter of now-ousted ex-President Yoon Suk Yeol, blocked the elevator with other supporters, urging embassy employees and reporters to curse at Xi and liberal politician Lee Jae-myung.
Hashtags

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


Korea Herald
10 minutes ago
- Korea Herald
Speaker says presidents must get Assembly's consent before imposing martial law
National Assembly Speaker Woo Won-shik said Wednesday that the Constitution should be amended to include requiring the Assembly's consent before martial law can be imposed by the president. "Martial law decree should necessitate the Assembly's approval. We saw how it can be a problem that the Assembly doesn't have the power to prevent it," Woo said at a press conference. The current Constitution stipulates that a martial law decree by the president must go through the Cabinet, but not the Assembly. Regarding a timeline for amendments, Woo said a public conversation among the parties, government and people would be necessary. Updating the Constitution had been a key agenda item for presidential candidates this election. As a candidate, President Lee Jae-myung floated changing the Constitution to allow presidents to serve two consecutive terms. South Korean presidents serve a single term of five years without the possibility of a second. People Power Party candidate Kim Moon-soo had proposed slashing the executive branch's authorities to balance with the legislative and judicial branches. Woo also said that once the two parties' new leadership is sworn in, he would convene a parliamentary ethics committee to deliberate on expelling Rep. Lee Jun-seok of the third New Reform Party from the Assembly. An online petition on the Assembly's website calling for the third-party lawmaker to be expelled had garnered over 500,000 signatures in less than a week after being posted, as of Wednesday. Expelling a lawmaker requires a two-thirds consent of the Assembly under the Constitution. Lee, who had run as the New Reform Party's presidential candidate, came under scrutiny for quoting inappropriate sexual remarks allegedly made by his then-Democratic Party opponent's son during a televised debate. Lee has since apologized for his remarks, saying he regretted them. Before Woo was elected the Assembly's speaker in June 2024, he had been a five-time lawmaker with the Democratic Party of Korea.


Korea Herald
31 minutes ago
- Korea Herald
Lee Jae-myung vows dividend boost, transparency in capital market
President calls for measures to seize profits from unfair stock transactions President Lee Jae-myung on Wednesday pledged to map out various incentives for listed companies on South Korean stock markets to pay out more dividends, saying the stock market could play a key role in boosting the national economy. "In other countries, people buy blue-chip stocks and use the dividends paid from them to supplement their living expenses, which boosts domestic consumption and contributes to a virtuous cycle in the economy, but (companies in) our country are not willing to pay dividends," said Lee during a meeting with representatives of the Korea Exchange, South Korea's main stock market operator, which is also tasked with market oversight. President Lee also said South Korean stocks tend to lag behind in dividend payments compared to other countries such as China. "There must be various reasons for that. So we are preparing for tax code reforms and policy improvements to boost dividends," Lee said. "If equities become an alternative destination that people find as attractive as real estate, then by allowing people to get more dividends and make money to cover living costs, companies will find it easier to attract capital, and a virtuous cycle will be created," he also said. The remarks came as South Korea's stock market hit a three-year high, extending a winning streak that started with his inauguration the previous week. Lee, who took office on June 4, also said restoring transparency in South Korea's capital market was his priority. Meeting the KRX representatives, including 55 rank-and-file employees of the bourse operator, Lee stressed the need for stronger market monitoring to tackle unfair trading practices -- namely, insider trading, market manipulation and market disruption. "At the core of a capitalist economy lies the stock market," Lee said. "The most important task is to resolve, or at least alleviate, the unfairness and opacity of the stock market." Later in the afternoon, Lee's spokesperson elaborated on the president's remarks that the government would respond firmly to unfair trading by implementing a "one strike, you're out" policy for acts such as stock manipulation. The government would seek measures to recover illicit gains through fines equal to the profits obtained,' his spokesperson Kang Yu-jung told reporters. During his presidential election campaign, Lee pledged to improve market liquidity for stock investors and come up with measures to better distribute profits to shareholders. Lee, the former leader of what was then the main opposition party, has also called for a legal revision to require boardrooms at South Korean companies to fulfill their fiduciary duty not only to their companies but also to their shareholders. The Kospi -- South Korea's benchmark stock index -- hit its highest point in about three years and five months, continuing its winning streak for a fifth consecutive trading day since Lee's inauguration on June 4. The market did not operate on Friday due to the observance of National Memorial Day. At 3 p.m. Wednesday, the Kospi stood at 2,903.10 points, up more than 1 percent from the previous day's close. Over the first week of Lee's presidency, the index had risen nearly 8 percent. Foreign investor net inflows also continued for the past five trading days, including net purchases of 93.2 billion won ($68 million) on Wednesday as of around 3 p.m.


Korea Herald
an hour ago
- Korea Herald
Lee's Foreign Ministry: Young vice ministers in, Moon-era No. 2 tipped for top post
President Lee Jae-myung's foreign policy team is taking shape ahead of his diplomatic debut at the G7 summit, with the surprising appointment of young vice ministers that breaks with Korea's long-established seniority system. At the same time, veteran diplomat Cho Hyun, who previously served as both first and second vice minister, as well as UN ambassador, under the liberal Moon Jae-in government and during the first Trump administration, has all but secured his place as the leading candidate for foreign minister. The Foreign Ministry was startled by the presidential office's announcement on Tuesday that Park Yoon-joo would be appointed as first vice foreign minister, as his serving period was shorter than that of officials who would now serve under him. Park passed the 29th foreign service exam in 1995, making him 11 years junior to his predecessor, Kim Hong-kyun, who passed the 18th foreign service exam. In terms of years of service since passing the foreign service exam, Park is also the junior of the current deputy ministers for political affairs, protocol affairs, and planning and coordination — all of whom he now directly oversees. At the Foreign Ministry in Seoul, where a rigid seniority-based culture prevails, it is considered virtually unprecedented for someone so junior in years of service to be appointed as first vice foreign minister, overseeing bilateral affairs and personnel management. However, Park is not the youngest person to serve as first vice minister; the previous Moon Jae-in administration appointed Choi Jong-kun to the post in 2020 when he was just 46 years old. Park reportedly has a long-standing relationship with National Security Adviser Wi Sung-lac, dating back to their time working together at the presidential office. When Wi was dispatched from the Foreign Ministry to the transition committee during the Roh Moo-hyun administration in 2002 and 2003, Park was serving at the Cheong Wa Dae, the presidential office and residence, which is also known as the Blue House. In 2004, when Wi was posted to Washington as minister at the South Korean Embassy, Park also served alongside him as first secretary at the same embassy. Park's most recent position was minister at South Korea's mission to the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, but most of his career has been devoted to diplomacy vis-a-vis the US. Park has served as first secretary at the Embassy in Washington, director of North American Affairs, deputy consul general at the Korean Consulate General in Boston, deputy director-general at the Bureau of North American Affairs, and consul general in Atlanta. Kim Jina, a professor in the Department of Language and Diplomacy at Hankuk University of Foreign Studies, was appointed second vice foreign minister, overseeing multilateral and economic affairs. Born in 1979, Kim is also younger than most director-general-level officials who head the bureaus, serving as the ministry's backbone. Her predecessor, Kang In-sun, was born in 1964. Kim played an active role in the 'Responsible Global Power Committee,' which helped shape Lee Jae-myung's foreign, security and unification policies during his presidential campaign, serving as vice chair of the committee's Practical Diplomacy Subcommittee. The committee was co-chaired by Lee Jong-seok, the current nominee for director of the National Intelligence Service, an expert on North Korea and former unification minister under the Roh Moo-hyun administration, as well as Rep. Cho Jeong-sik of the Democratic Party of Korea. Cho: Trade veteran Cho Hyun, a veteran career diplomat with extensive experience in multilateral diplomacy and trade, has been tipped as the Lee administration's first foreign minister, according to multiple sources. Cho worked for the Responsible Global Power Committee, which was led by Lee Jong-seok, as well as the Special Committee on Northeast Asian Peace and Cooperation, chaired by Wi. The latter serves as the Democratic Party's main body for overseeing security affairs and for setting the direction of its North Korea policy and approach to the North Korean nuclear issue. Cho's diplomatic career includes ambassador to India in 2015, as well as ambassador to Austria and permanent representative to international organizations in Vienna in 2011. Cho also held the post of deputy permanent representative to the UN in New York in 2006. Within the Foreign Ministry, Cho has held numerous high-level positions, including deputy minister for multilateral and global affairs, ambassador for energy and resources, and director-general of the Ministry's International Economic Affairs Bureau. Cho was involved in the Korea-Japan free trade agreement negotiations and served as chief negotiator for the Korea-Mexico FTA. As ambassador to India — a major emerging market — in 2015, he worked to strengthen economic cooperation between the two countries.