Business World

South Korea’s Lotte Group says four retail stores in China closed amid political tension

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SEOUL — South Korea’s Lotte Group said on Monday four of its retail stores in China were closed after inspection­s by authoritie­s, as Seoul protests at discrimina­ting action by China after Lotte agreed to provide land for a US missile defense system.

China is the biggest overseas market for Lotte Group, South Korea’s No.5 conglomera­te, generating annual sales of a little more than 3 trillion Korean won ($2.60 billion) in 2015.

A Lotte Mart spokesman said the four stores, in Dandong, Changzhou and two other locations, were closed last week after the inspection­s, but could not provide further details. Lotte Mart had about 115 stores in China by January.

The retail closures came after affiliate Lotte Internatio­nal Co Ltd approved a South Korean land swap last week to allow the US Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system, which is being installed in response to North Korea’s missile threat.

South Korea’s military said earlier on Monday North Korea fired “multiple ballistic missiles” from its Tongchang-ri region, where a missile base is located.

South Korea’s acting president Hwang Kyo-ahn said on Monday Seoul should swiftly complete the THAAD deployment after the launch of the missiles.

China has objected to the deployment of the missile system, saying it has a radar capable of penetratin­g Chinese territory.

Shares in Lotte Shopping, of which Lotte Mart is a business division, fell 2% by 0155 GMT, compared with a 0.2% drop in the wider market.

Lotte’s duty free operator, Lotte Duty Free, said on Thursday a cyber attack using Chinese internet protocol (IP) addresses had crashed its website. It is currently back online.

FEARS OF CANCELLATI­ONS

China’s tourism ministry instructed tour operators in Beijing on Thursday to stop selling trips to South Korea from March 15, with the order spreading to other regions across the mainland, an official at Korea Tourism Organizati­on said on Monday.

The order came days after the Lotte land swap.

A Chinese company abruptly canceled its plan to send some 5,000 employees to South Korea’s Incheon city in April, the official said, adding that there were concerns about more cancellati­ons by group tourists.

Shares of tourism, cosmetics, and airline firms extended losses on Monday, although the declines were not as severe as those on Friday.

On Friday, China canceled its invitation for South Korea Trade Minister Joo Hyung-hwan to its annual Boao forum, the ministry said on Monday. The forum’s office cited a lack of panels for a session to which Joo was invited, the ministry said, without elaboratin­g further. —

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