In its first coverage of last week’s short-lived martial law order, North Korean state media focused on protests calling for ...
The North Korean regime managed to stay afloat, but its survival strategy, heavily depending on labor extraction and ...
Officials accused 14 North Koreans of conspiring to use false identities to get IT jobs with U.S. companies and siphon money ...
Martial law was lifted in Korea, but political and economic turmoil could continue. Russia is treating North Korean troops well right now, Ukraine's Zelenskyy said, as it wants more to come fight ...
In this photo provided by South Korea Presidential Office, South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol speaks during a press ...
Protesters in front of the National Assembly stayed well into the night, as the voting session dragged on. People held candles and colorful light sticks. South Korea has a tradition of holding ...
South Korea's President Yoon Suk Yeol declared martial law late on December 3 before he was forced into a U-turn after ...
The crisis is also raising concerns about the military's chain of command in the face of nuclear-armed North Korea, which has bolstered its weapons arsenal despite pressure from the South and its ...
In his martial law announcement on Tuesday night, Yoon called parliament a “den of criminals” bogging down state affairs and vowed to eliminate “shameless North Korea followers and anti ...
South Korea police try to raid Yoon's office over martial law Asia Pacificcategory· 4:14 PM UTC Kim became the first official to be arrested over Yoon's martial law declaration. Who is Kim Yong ...
The furor began late Tuesday night, when Yoon declared martial law in an unannounced television address, accusing the main opposition party of sympathizing with North Korea and of “anti-state ...