Key Points

South Korea's Foreign Minister is meeting with US officials to address the detention of hundreds of citizens. The individuals were arrested during an immigration raid at an electric vehicle plant construction site. Seoul has arranged a chartered flight to bring them home this week. The minister will also discuss visa policy improvements for Korean workers in the US.

Key Points: South Korea FM Cho Hyun Meets Rubio Over 300 Detained Nationals

  • 300 South Koreans detained after immigration raid at EV plant construction site
  • Minister Cho flying to Washington for urgent diplomatic resolution
  • Chartered flight arranged to bring detained citizens back to South Korea
  • Talks include visa policy revisions for smoother business operations
2 min read

South Korea's FM to discuss issue of detained Koreans with Rubio

South Korean Foreign Minister Cho Hyun meets US Secretary Rubio to secure release of 300 citizens detained in Georgia immigration raid, arranging chartered flight home.

"We are primarily focused on resolving the issue of our nationals in detention and ensuring their safe return home. - Ministry official"

Seoul, Sep 9

South Korea's Foreign Minister Cho Hyun will meet with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in Washington for talks expected to focus on some 300 S. Koreans detained in Georgia following a major immigration raid by US authorities, a Seoul official said Tuesday.

Cho plans to meet with his US counterpart on Tuesday (US time), as the South Korean nationals remain in custody at a detention center in Folkston after being arrested in Thursday's crackdown at a South Korean joint electric vehicle plant construction site in Bryan County, near Savannah.

Cho flew to Washington on Monday to resolve the issue, as Seoul has been preparing a chartered flight to bring the detained citizens back home this week.

"We cannot say specifically at this stage what the minister will discuss with Secretary Rubio," a ministry official said, Yonhap News Agency reported. "But what we can say is that we are primarily focused on resolving the issue of our nationals in detention and ensuring their safe return home."

Talks are also under way with Washington to arrange meetings between Cho and US officials from federal government agencies responsible for immigration policy and enforcement, such as the Department of Homeland Security, the official said.

If held, Cho is expected to request their cooperation to ensure that the detained South Koreans will be able to leave the US in the form of voluntary departure, instead of deportation, and that they will not face disadvantages in their future entries to the US.

Cho is also expected to use his meetings to discuss ways to revise the US visa policy for South Korean workers, such as creating a new work visa program or increasing visa quotas to allow smoother business operations for companies investing in the US.

Industry sources said Korean Air has arranged a Boeing 747-8i to depart for Atlanta as early as Wednesday (Seoul time) to bring the citizens home.

Of the detained people, those with foreign nationalities are also likely to board the same flight.

As for the expected departure time of the chartered flight, the government is "fine-tuning" details to allow it to leave Atlanta on Thursday (local time), the ministry official said.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Interesting how this is about an EV plant construction. Many Indian companies are also investing in US manufacturing. Hope they learn from this incident about proper visa documentation for their workers.
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Michael C
While I sympathize with the detained individuals, countries must respect immigration laws. The US has every right to enforce its regulations. Hope they find a diplomatic solution though.
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Ananya R
️ 300 people detained! That's massive. Must be so stressful for their families back in Korea. Good that their government is arranging a chartered flight. Shows responsibility toward citizens.
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Siddharth J
The voluntary departure vs deportation distinction is crucial. Deportation would create permanent records and affect future travel. Smart diplomatic move by South Korea to negotiate this.
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Rohit P
This is exactly why countries need to have strong bilateral agreements. Many Indian IT professionals face similar issues in the US. Hope they work out better visa policies as mentioned in the article.

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