The Sun (Malaysia)

South Korea to ‘actively consider’ filing WTO complaint against China

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SEOUL: South Korea will consider filing a complaint against China to the World Trade Organizati­on (WTO) over what it described as trade retaliatio­n for the deployment of a US anti-missile system outside of Seoul, the ruling party said yesterday.

South Korea in July decided to install the Terminal High Altitude Area Defense (THAAD) system in response to missile threat from North Korea, despite China objecting that THAAD’s radar can penetrate its territory.

South Korean companies in China have since reported cyber attacks, store closures and fines, while statecontr­olled media has called for a boycott of South Korean goods and services.

“We will actively consider whether China’s action is in violation of the South Korea-China free trade deal, while stepping up efforts to minimise damage on South Korean industries,” Lee Hyun-jae, chairman of the Liberty Korea Party’s policy committee, said after meeting senior government officials.

Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang, when asked about the matter yesterday, reiterated China’s stance that law-abiding foreign companies are welcome and will be protected.

In the latest instance of suspected discrimina­tion, China has rejected applicatio­ns from airlines including Jeju Air Co Ltd to add charter flights between the two countries this month, Yonhap News Agency reported yesterday. This adds to similar rejections for January and February. No reasons have been given for any of the rejections.

A Jeju Air spokesman confirmed the March rejection when contacted by Reuters. Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng said in a briefing he was not aware of the charter flight issue.

The rejections would be the second blow in a matter of days for South Korean travel companies, after the Chinese government last week ordered tour operators in China to stop selling trips to South Korea.

Lee said yesterday the Seoul government had since agreed to provide 50 billion won (RM193 million) worth of “special loans” for tourism firms experienci­ng difficulti­es due to the order.

Chinese authoritie­s have also closed retail stores belonging to Lotte Group following inspection­s. The number of closures had reached 39, and one store has received a fine, a Lotte Mart spokesman said yesterday. – Reuters

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