South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol yesterday suspended his near-daily media briefings amid a spat over banning a major TV broadcaster’s reporters from boarding the presidential plane for what he called “malicious” and “fake” news.
Yoon’s office barred a crew from MBC from riding in the plane with him during a Southeast Asia visit earlier this month, alleging biased coverage of recent controversies.
The end of the free-wheeling briefings came three days after an MBC reporter shouted a question to Yoon asking what was “malicious” about their reporting, to which Yoon walked off without an answer.
Photo: EPA-EFE
It was immediately followed by a quarrel between the reporter and a presidential official as the official criticized the journalist for a “lack of courtesy.”
In its statement yesterday, Yoon’s office said it decided the informal briefing could not continue without measures to prevent similar incidents from recurring.
The briefings were a break with years of tradition in South Korea, where daily access to the president was previously unheard of, as the new leader sought to step up transparency and dispel worries about his lack of political experience.
Just months after taking office as a political newcomer in May, Yoon is struggling with low approval ratings as he tries to drive a post-COVID-19 economic recovery and deal with North Korea’s nuclear and missile tests.
His approval ratings stood at 33.4 percent in pollster Realmeter’s survey yesterday, down from 34.6 percent last week. Nearly 64 percent disapproved of his performance.
Yoon said on Friday that the decision to exclude MBC from the plane was “inevitable” to protect the constitution, accusing the broadcaster of threatening national security by “attempting to drive a wedge” between South Korea and the US.
MBC was among the first to report on a viral video in which Yoon was caught on a hot mic making insulting remarks as he left an event in New York after a brief chat with US President Joe Biden in September.
Media initially reported Yoon’s crude comments were targeting the US Congress, but Yoon’s office said he was referring to South Korea’s parliament.
Critics have said the decision to bar MBC from boarding the plane is a violation of press freedom.
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