logo
South Korea's new President Lee to restart talks with North, bolster ties with US and Japan

South Korea's new President Lee to restart talks with North, bolster ties with US and Japan

South Korea's new President Lee Jae-myung vowed on Wednesday to restart dormant talks with North Korea and bolster a trilateral partnership with the United States and Japan, as he laid out key policy goals for his single, five-year term.
Advertisement
Lee, who rose from childhood poverty to become South Korea's leading liberal politician vowing to fight inequality and corruption, formally began his term earlier on Wednesday, hours after winning a snap election that was triggered in April by the removal of then president Yoon Suk-yeol over his ill-fated imposition of martial law late last year.
In his inaugural address at the National Assembly, Lee said his government would deal with North Korean nuclear threats and its potential military aggressions with 'strong deterrence' based on the solid South Korea-US military alliance. But he said he would 'open a communication channel with North Korea and establish peace on the Korean peninsula through talks and cooperation'.
He said he would pursue pragmatic diplomacy with neighbouring countries and boost trilateral Seoul-Washington-Tokyo cooperation based on the robust South Korea-US alliance.
'Through pragmatic diplomacy based on national interests, we will turn the crisis posed by the major shift in global economic and security landscapes into an opportunity to maximise our national interests,' Lee said.
South Korea's new President Lee Jae-myung and his wife Kim Hye-kyung after attending the presidential inauguration at the National Assembly in Seoul, South Korea, on Wednesday. Photo: EPA-EFE
It was unclear whether Lee's election would cause any major, immediate shift in South Korea's foreign policy. Lee, previously accused by critics of tilting towards China and North Korea and away from the US and Japan, has recently repeatedly stressed South Korea's alliance with the US as the foundation of its foreign policy and avoided any contentious remarks that would raise questions on his views on the US and Japan.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Fight for Hong Kong's university spots to heat up as 150,000 more teens eligible
Fight for Hong Kong's university spots to heat up as 150,000 more teens eligible

South China Morning Post

time2 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Fight for Hong Kong's university spots to heat up as 150,000 more teens eligible

Hong Kong's 'predicament' is reminder of the 'unplanned consequences' of official policies, ex-leader CY Leung says Competition for university places is set to intensify in Hong Kong as more than 150,000 children born in the city to mainland Chinese parents will be eligible to apply for subsidised tertiary education in the next five years. Former leader Leung Chun-ying, who banned mainland women from giving birth in Hong Kong starting in 2013, said on Monday that he had 'no solution' to potential problems, as the children were entitled to subsidised university places. But the 'predicament' served as a reminder over the current talent admission policies, which bore similar 'unplanned consequences', he said. Hong Kong experienced a 'baby boom' from 2006 to 2012, helped partly by children who were born to mainland parents in the city after a landmark court ruling in 2001 declared that newborns should be given the right of abode regardless of their parents' immigration status. Most of the children went to the mainland for their foundation education. According to the government, 150,139 children born from 2008 to 2012 to parents who were not Hong Kong residents were eligible to apply for subsidised university places after sitting the Diploma of Secondary Education (DSE) exams in the next five years. After the government banned mainland women from giving birth in the city in 2013, the number of newborns dropped drastically to 790. 'They now come back to sit the DSE to compete for university places and they can compete for subsidised university places,' Danny Lai Tsz-kit, co-president of Greater Bay Area Education Resource Centre, said on a radio programme. Newsletter Every Saturday Hong Kong Update By submitting, you consent to receiving marketing emails from SCMP. If you don't want these, tick here {{message}} Thanks for signing up for our newsletter! Please check your email to confirm your subscription. Follow us on Facebook to get our latest news. 'But the number of subsidised university places has remained at 15,000. Should the number be reviewed?' Government data suggests that not all of these Hong Kong-born children return for studies. Around 2,700 private DSE candidates this year were from the mainland, whereas 18,816 babies were born in Hong Kong to mainland parents in 2007, and aged 18 now. But a surge in DSE takers on the mainland was marked by a proliferation of schools that offer the curriculum across the border. The Post has found that there are at least 72 such schools on the mainland, with some planning further expansion given the growing demand for the DSE. Leung Chun-ying says he has 'no solution' for the issue. Photo: Dickson Lee Some principals said they had noted that this year's Form Six graduates faced stronger competition for university places due to more students living on the mainland sitting the DSE and joining the allocation system. They said that, unlike in previous years, those who attained median scores in the university entrance exams failed to secure places on their preferred courses. A number of DSE students also made similar complaints on social media platforms. Only 37 per cent of students applying for local university places under a centralised allocation system secured a place this year, compared with 40 per cent in 2024. Former chief executive Leung told the Post that during his leadership he foresaw that educational opportunities for local students would be reduced if the number of babies born in Hong Kong to mainland parents kept rising without stopping. Leung, who was leader from 2012 to 2017, said that was why he introduced a 'zero-quota' policy to ban mainland women from giving birth in Hong Kong from 2013. Asked how the government should address growing demand from these children for local subsidised places in the coming few years, Leung said he 'had no solution'. 'You should ask those who made this policy. The predicament we are in is also the reason I said we cannot open the floodgates to the various categories of talent because we have no control on whether they will come to Hong Kong long-term and therefore no planning or control on the various social services we need to provide for them,' he added. Leung, now a state leader as a vice-chairman of the Chinese People's Political Consultative Conference, the country's top political advisory body, also warned that current talent policies sounded too similar to those for mainland women giving birth before the ban in terms of 'unplanned consequences' as the mainland population was huge. Children born in Hong Kong to non-local parents and mainland students who receive dependant visas only need to pay the annual local university fee of HK$44,500 (US$5,670). Non-local students must pay more than three times that amount. Authorities recently announced that the children of non-local talent would be required to stay in Hong Kong for at least two years to become eligible for resident student benefits at publicly funded tertiary education institutions from 2028-29 to help prevent abuse. Eligibility will be tightened over a transition period, with a one-year residency requirement to be introduced for 2027-28 applications, before the threshold rises to two years for 2028-29. But the latest announcement did not apply to Hong Kong children whose parents are not city residents. The Education Bureau has been approached for a response on Leung's recent remarks on the DSE and how it will be able to make sure local students' opportunities will not be encroached on.

China's Xi and Brazil's Lula hold phone call amid US trade rupture
China's Xi and Brazil's Lula hold phone call amid US trade rupture

South China Morning Post

time3 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

China's Xi and Brazil's Lula hold phone call amid US trade rupture

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva has spoken by phone with Chinese leader Xi Jinping for about an hour, in a high-level contact aimed at reinforcing ties with Brazil's largest trading partner while confronting a sudden rupture in trade relations with the United States. The call on Tuesday morning Beijing time, requested by Lula, had been in preparation for several days, according to Brazilian officials. Advisers at the Planalto Palace and the foreign ministry had been in contact with Beijing since last week to arrange the timing, which had to accommodate the 11-hour time difference with the Chinese capital. Sources told the South China Morning Post that the decision to press ahead came after Lula consulted senior ministers about the potential impact of new US trade measures and the diplomatic message he wanted to send. The conversation took place four days after US President Donald Trump's administration imposed a 50 per cent tariff on a broad range of Brazilian exports, measures that threaten billions of dollars in annual trade. Hours earlier, Washington extended a 90-day pause on similar duties for Chinese goods, highlighting a stark difference in treatment between Beijing and Brasilia. 02:12 Brazil plans to retaliate against US tariffs that partly aim to free former leader Bolsonaro Brazil plans to retaliate against US tariffs that partly aim to free former leader Bolsonaro

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store