Latest News

South Korean workers go home after a week of immigration raid

About 300 South Korean workers were released on Friday after being held for a week in an extensive U.S. Immigration raid in Georgia at a site of a battery-project.

Officials, including the chief of staff to the president, cheered as workers wearing masks disembarked a chartered flight at Incheon Airport.

Seoul had been in intense negotiations for a week to secure their release and return them after they were arrested in handcuffs. This shocked many South Koreans, who are a close ally of the United States.

South Korean companies have struggled for years to obtain the proper visas needed for specialists who are required at project sites. Some workers have relied on grey areas of U.S. Visa enforcement.

According to the South Korean foreign minister, who was in Washington this week, both countries are considering establishing a group to examine a new visa type for Koreans.

Families and representatives of LG Energy Solution and its subcontractors welcomed the workers, which included 10 Chinese, 3 Japanese and one Indonesian. The battery company has partnered with Hyundai Motor in order to build a plant in Georgia.

The raid has horrified South Koreans, and threatened to destabilise relations at a time that the two countries are trying to finalise an agreement on trade which includes a fund of $350 billion to support strategic U.S. Industries.

Someone unfurled a poster at the arrival gate that showed Donald Trump, the U.S. president, wearing an outfit with initials for the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency and carrying a large bag of dollar bills, with a machinegun slung across the chest. The caption read "We're Friends!" ".

Cho Hyun, the South Korean Foreign Ministry, flew this week to Washington to try to find a quick solution. He has asked U.S. officials for a new visa that would be available to workers of Korean companies investing in the United States.

The President of South Korea, Lee Jae Myung, warned that the incident may make South Korean firms hesitant to invest in the U.S. at a moment when Trump is trying to encourage foreign manufacturing investment. (Reporting and editing by Ed Davies, Edwiina gibbs and Ju-min Park; Additional reporting and editing by Hyunjoo Ji and Ju-min Park)

(source: Reuters)