(LEAD) Tensions loom as doctors plan mass rally in deepening clash over med school quota


Tensions were rising Saturday as defiant doctors were set to hold a mass rally over the weekend in protest against the government plan to increase medical school admissions, with no sign of a breakthrough amid growing risks of a major medical disruption.

The Korea Medical Association (KMA), the largest doctors’ lobby group, plans to stage a large demonstration in western Seoul on Sunday in a show of resistance against the government’s plan to add 2,000 more seats to the medical school admission quota starting next year.

Some 20,000 doctors are expected to take part in the rally, the KMA said.

The government is intensifying the pressure on the striking doctors, with the filing of a criminal complaint against some former and incumbent KMA officials in a clear warning that it will not hesitate to take legal action if the strike continues.

On Friday, the police conducted raids on homes and offices of the KMA officials on suspicions of encouraging the trainee doctors to walk off the job en masse and abetting
the strike.

The government had made the final plea to the junior doctors to return to work by Thursday, or they will face punishment, including the suspension of licenses.

The government’s appeal has done little to bring the interns and residents back to the hospitals. As of Thursday afternoon, 565 of 9,510 striking doctors had returned, representing only about 6 percent.

The Ministry of Health and Welfare has posted a public notice on its website ordering about a dozen striking doctors taking the lead in the walkout to return to work, a move seen as a precursor to begin the process for penal action.

The government is expected to wait until the end of the weekend for more doctors to return before taking steps for punitive measures. Friday was a public holiday in South Korea.

On Saturday, the World Medical Association issued a statement on the ongoing confrontation, calling the government’s plan a “unilateral decision to drastically increase medical student admissions, implemented without clear evidence,”
and “lacking sufficient consultation and consensus with expert groups.”

“The right to collective action is universal, and guidelines are in place to ensure patient safety remains paramount during any collective action taken by physicians,” it claimed.

The health ministry strongly refuted the claims, saying the statement only represents “the unilateral opinions” of Korean doctors.

“It is not true that the government made the decision unilaterally,” it said, adding it had more than 130 rounds of talks with the medical circle.

The Korean Health and Medical Workers’ Union also voiced concern over the growing healthcare gap earlier in the day, saying “The collective refusal of medical treatment by specialists has been threatening patients’ lives.”

“Surgeries, treatments, hospitalizations and examinations are not being performed on time, causing the golden treatment time to be missed,” it said.

Doctors are subject to suspension of their medical licenses for up to a year, or could face three years in prison or
a fine of 30 million won (US$22,455), for not complying with such government orders.

The strike, which began Feb. 20, has caused disruptions at major general hospitals across the country, leading to cancellations and delays in surgeries and other critical treatment.

The government is pushing to increase the physician numbers as a way to resolve the shortage of doctors in rural areas and essential medical fields, such as pediatrics and neurosurgery, and also given the super-aging population.

Doctors say the quota hikes will undermine the quality of medical education and other services and result in higher medical costs for patients. They have called for measures to first address the under-paid specialists and improve the legal protection against excessive medical malpractice lawsuits.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Ex-PPP leader to run for seat in less conservative Hwaseong city


Lee Jun-seok, leader of the newly launched New Reform Party, said Saturday that he will run for a parliamentary seat representing a constituency in Hwaseong, a metropolitan city near Seoul considered traditionally a liberal stronghold.

Lee, a former leader of the ruling conservative People Power Party, made the announcement in a Facebook post that he will run for the constituency that covers Dongtan 2 New Town in the upcoming April 10 elections.

“Hwaseong is a difficult area for conservatives and it’s like a grave to them, but it is the youngest city that will produce many future growth engines for the Republic of Korea,” Lee told Yonhap News over the phone.

“This place, where the industries will grow, is where I will have a lot of jobs to do, such as building the infrastructure for education and transport,” Lee said.

Lee’s new party was created in early February through a hasty merger with a group of former Democratic Party members, led by former Prime Minister Lee Nak-yon, about two months ahead of the
elections.

But the so-called “big tent” party split only 11 days after the merger, as the two Lees have clashed over who should lead the election campaign and policymaking activities.

Lee, 38, is known for becoming the first leader of a major political party as a young politician in his 30s in the country’s history. He has run for the parliamentary seat in Seoul’s northern district and never won.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

1 crew member missing from capsized fishing boat off Jeju found dead


One of the two crew members missing from the fishing boat that capsized off the southern island of Jeju the previous day was found dead, the Coast Guard said Saturday.

The body of the crew member was discovered at around 12:30 p.m. in waters about 22 kilometers away from the accident site by a fishing boat that was helping with the rescue work, the Jeju Coast Guard officials said.

Officials later identified the body as one of the two fishermen, in his 50s, who went missing after the boat overturned in waters off the Seogwipo city early Friday.

Eight of the 10 crew members, made up of five South Koreans and five Vietnamese, were rescued by a fishing boat nearby, but one of them, a South Korean, was pronounced dead about an hour later.

The seven others were sent to hospital for treatment, with two crew members left unaccounted for.

The Coast Guard has been conducting search operations for the two missing South Koreans, including the captain.

Strong winds and high waves have hindered the operation. One Co
ast Guard official sustained a serious injury and was taken to a hospital after being swept away by waves while searching the boat.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Tensions loom as doctors plan mass rally in deepening clash over med school quota


Tensions were rising Saturday as defiant doctors were set to hold a mass rally over the weekend in protest against the government plan to increase medical school admissions, with no sign of a breakthrough amid growing risks of a major medical disruption.

The Korea Medical Association (KMA), the largest doctors’ lobby group, plans to stage a large demonstration in western Seoul on Sunday in a show of resistance against the government’s plan to add 2,000 more seats to the medical school admission quota starting next year.

Some 20,000 doctors are expected to take part in the rally, the KMA said.

The government is intensifying the pressure on the striking doctors, with the filing of a criminal complaint against some former and incumbent KMA officials in a clear warning that it will not hesitate to take legal action if the strike continues.

On Friday, the police conducted raids on homes and offices of the KMA officials on suspicions of encouraging the trainee doctors to walk off the job en masse and abetting
the strike.

The government had made the final plea to the junior doctors to return to work by Thursday, or they will face punishment, including the suspension of licenses.

The government’s appeal has done little to bring the interns and residents back to the hospitals. As of Thursday afternoon, 565 of 9,510 striking doctors had returned, representing only about 6 percent.

The Ministry of Health and Welfare has posted a public notice on its website ordering about a dozen striking doctors taking the lead in the walkout to return to work, a move seen as a precursor to begin the process for penal action.

The government is expected to wait until the end of the weekend for more doctors to return before taking steps for punitive measures. Friday was a public holiday in South Korea.

Doctors are subject to suspension of their medical licenses for up to a year, or could face three years in prison or a fine of 30 million won (US$22,455), for not complying with such government orders.

The strike, which began Feb. 2
0, has caused disruptions at major general hospitals across the country, leading to cancellations and delays in surgeries and other critical treatment.

The government is pushing to increase the physician numbers as a way to resolve the shortage of doctors in rural areas and essential medical fields, such as pediatrics and neurosurgery, and also given the super-aging population.

Doctors say the quota hikes will undermine the quality of medical education and other services and result in higher medical costs for patients. They have called for measures to first address the under-paid specialists and improve the legal protection against excessive medical malpractice lawsuits.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

‘Exhuma’ tops 5 mln admissions in 10 days since release


Director Jang Jae-hyun’s occult flick “Exhuma” continues its strong box-office performance, surpassing 3 million cumulative viewers in just one week since its release.

According to the distributor Showbox on Saturday, the supernatural thriller topped 5 million cumulative viewers earlier in the day, becoming the most-viewed film released this year.

Starring Choi Min-sik and Kim Go-eun, it follows two shamans, a feng shui expert and a mortician, who team up to get to the bottom of a series of mysterious events plaguing a wealthy U.S.-based family by exhuming its ancestor’s grave in a remote Korean village.

Source: Yonhap News Agency

Poland preparing technical inspection at diplomatic mission in N. Korea: VOA


Poland is in talks with North Korea to conduct a technical inspection at its diplomatic mission in Pyongyang, a U.S. news outlet reported Saturday, after a few other European countries have taken similar steps amid prospects of reopening the missions in the North after years of the pandemic-driven shutdown.

Poland is “discussing with the DPRK authorities a suitable time for both sides to conduct a technical mission in Pyongyang,” the Voice of America reported, citing a written comment from a Polish foreign ministry spokesperson in response to its query.

DPRK stands for the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, the North’s official name.

The official said that Poland is “interested in maintaining” the diplomatic presence in the North that had been there long before 2020 when the global COVID-19 outbreak began, according to the VOA.

The VOA also reported that the Czech Republic is “exploring conditions” to reopen its embassy in Pyongyang, quoting a Czech foreign ministry official.

The reports came after
some European countries sent their diplomats to Pyongyang or are preparing to do so, in what observers say may indicate efforts to reopen their diplomatic missions in the reclusive country after the North’s strict border shutdown.

North Korea began opening its border partially in August last year but has only permitted China, Russia, Cuba and Mongolia to resume diplomatic activities in Pyongyang.

A German diplomat visited North Korea earlier this week in the first known case for a Western diplomat to have visited Pyongyang since the border closure in early 2020.

Sweden’s ambassador-designate to the North was visiting North Korea this week and met with the Chinese envoy, the Chinese Embassy in Pyongyang said on its website.

Seoul officials have raised the possibility that the North’s decision to allow Western diplomats in might be related to South Korea’s establishment of diplomatic relations with Cuba.

The new Seoul-Havana ties are seen as a blow to Pyongyang given its decadeslong brotherly ties with the
Caribbean nation.

Source: Yonhap News Agency