
Julie Yoon
Breaking-News Video Editor, Seoul at The Washington Post
Articles
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3 weeks ago |
nzherald.co.nz | Niha Masih |Anumita Kaur |Frances Vinall |Julie Yoon
The widely circulated video of Turkish doctoral student Rumeysa Ozturk’s arrest in the Boston area has sent shockwaves through the academic community. As Tufts University student Rumeysa Ozturk made her way to an interfaith centre to break the Ramadan fast on Tuesday, plainclothes officers, some masked, descended on her. She screamed as an unmasked officer in a hooded sweatshirt grabbed her, security video shows. Within about a minute, the officers whisked her away in handcuffs.
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3 weeks ago |
adn.com | Niha Masih |Frances Vinall |Julie Yoon
As Tufts University student Rumeysa Ozturk made her way to an interfaith center to break the Ramadan fast on Tuesday, plainclothes officers, some masked, descended on her. She screamed as an unmasked officer in a hooded sweatshirt grabbed her, security video shows. Within about a minute, the officers whisked her away in handcuffs.
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4 weeks ago |
washingtonpost.com | Niha Masih |Frances Vinall |Julie Yoon
As Tufts University student Rumeysa Ozturk made her way to an interfaith center to break the Ramadan fast on Tuesday, plainclothes agents, some masked, descended on her. She screamed as an unmasked agent in a hooded sweatshirt grabbed her, security video shows. Within about a minute, the agents whisked her away in handcuffs.
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Dec 13, 2024 |
washingtonpost.com | Julie Yoon |Kelsey Ables
K-pop fans, many of them young women, were especially visible at the party-like protests that preceded the South Korean president's impeachment. SEOUL - Jung Han-young was singing along with a crowd to Korean music and holding a green light stick representing her favorite K-pop group, NCT. Around her, countless rows of fellow K-pop fans pumped their own light sticks to the beat, creating a constellation of shapes above them: pink hearts for BlackPink, hexagons for EXO, glowing spheres for BTS.
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Dec 8, 2024 |
postguam.com | Julie Yoon
SEOUL - South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol will remain in office despite his extraordinary and ill-fated attempt to impose martial law this week, after the National Assembly on Saturday failed to pass a bill to impeach him following a boycott by the president’s ruling party. Yoon rescinded his martial law decree after just six hours on Wednesday, when a majority in the assembly - including 18 members of his conservative People Power Party (PPP) - voted to overturn it.
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