1/ I thought I'd write about my experience re-entering South Korea, where I reside, during this global pandemic. It wasn't a 5 minute job like in London Heathrow where I was out in no time. Instead, it took 24 hours. Here's what happened:
2/ During flight, needed to fill out multiple forms incl. quarantine papers. Upon arrival in Incheon, immediate body temperature scan. As I was coming from the UK, quarantine official already had my name on list of a handful of people from hotspot UK/South Africa. Given lanyard.
3/ Next, I was told to throw away my KF-94 mask that I was wearing, replace it with their own even tighter twin strap 3M KF-95 mask, and made to wait to get tested for Covid-19 even though I already had a negative certificate. Test was carried out on the freezing windy tarmac.
4/ We were then taken to another waiting area with separate seating. Made to fill out more papers.
5/ Then went through immigration. Made to install quarantine app on phone, which includes entering passport number and valid telephone number. An official then called the phone number entered on the app to check it was real. More on app later. Violators of rules face deportation.
6/ Once through immigration, where they *also* checked my negative PCR test already done 2 days in the UK, we were escorted to collect our luggage. At all times, all officials were in full PPE.
7/ Next, we were escorted to a bus provided by emergency services.
8/ Arriving at the Incheon National Quarantine Facility Station, we were escorted to a waiting area, given a separate booth each, told to wait until test results came out at least 6 hours later.
9/ Aside from eating, masks to be worn at all times. Given dinner box a few hours later. Wasn't quite the countdown to 2021 I was expecting but people exclaimed happy new year at midnight.
10/ Towards 2 AM (9 hours later approx), people started receiving text messages saying their test results were negative. In fact, an official said that all those in the room were negative, but that some people incl. me had to have swabs re-examined (because from UK?).
11/ About five of us were then taken downstairs towards 4 AM, and isolated into individual negative pressure rooms (that basically prevent any potential virus from escaping, constantly sucking the air inside). Not a hotel, but can't complain.
12/ PPE dude comes in to check my temperature, and told me to wait another 10 hours until results come out. Finally some sleep after 36 hours.
13/ Breakfast was delivered at towards 7:30 AM on the table between the doors of the chamber. On the menu: egg mayo ham toast and diet banana milk. Actually my favourites!
14/ Then lunch arrived at midday, this dosirak lunchbox, again, delivered between the doors.
15/ Finally got the all clear negative result after lunch, told to wait for the nurse to come collect me. Given gloves, and made our way out back into a bus provided by emergency services. Escorted back to airport.
16/ Police were waiting for us at the airport, took the register of all those who had left quarantine, then brought us back into the airport in order to make arrangements to go back home for self-isolation. Assigned a taxi.
17/ Not just any taxi, a "quarantine taxi" separating the driver from passenger. Taken to doorstep. Cost 80,000 won, but little other choice (there's a "bus" service which is cheaper, but was not available and is less frequent).
From touchdown to home took well over 24 hours.
18/ Finally at home, was made to call local health centre to explain I had arrived and had already been tested. Those who are less at risk can leave airport and get tested in their local areas. Different people, different circumstances, different requirements.
19/ Regarding the quarantine app, need to diagnose oneself and enter results daily. I've heard stories of officials chasing you over the phone if you fail to enter data. Meanwhile, I'm stuck at home for 14 days. Cannot leave under any circumstance. Food/grocery deliveries fine.
20/ A reason for writing this thread is because I was appalled by the level of incompetence in the UK when I flew in a few weeks ago. Coming from "safe zone" S. Korea, I didn't need to self-isolate. Yet the flight back to the UK via Dubai was packed with maskless passengers.
21/ At Heathrow Airport, masses of people were all over the place without masks, *including* airport staff. Those who were wearing masks had them under their noses. Baggage collection was messy and a massive virus hazard. Felt vulnerable.
22/ 24 hours to get back home in S. Korea, even though a resident, were a little annoying given the lack of sleep etc, but I can't complain. It's necessary process to fight this virus.
Yet I see so many people and governments who are still clueless, namely the UK.
• • •
Missing some Tweet in this thread? You can try to
force a refresh
1/ I just watched the German public broadcaster ARD's documentary about South Korea's martial law crisis. It’s both appalling and shocking. This isn't merely biased journalism, it's borderline unethical, functioning essentially as a mouthpiece for far-right conspiracy theorists.
2/ The documentary presents extreme views without any pushback whatsoever. It legitimises unfounded claims about Chinese/North Korean infiltration, election fraud, and a supposed "communist threat" from the opposition. All without critical examination. ardmediathek.de/video/phoenix-…
3/ Of the six main voices featured, five represent conservative or far-right viewpoints. Only one offers any counterbalance. The most extreme voices, including the notorious far-right pastor Jeon Kwang-hoon, are presented as legitimate commentators rather than fringe figures.
1/ The impeachment proceedings against President Yoon are reaching their conclusion.
The Constitutional Court must determine if his December martial law declaration violated South Korea’s democratic order.
Here are the key questions the court must consider:
2/ First: was there legal basis for martial law? The Constitution only permits this during a state of war, internal turmoil or an equivalent emergency requiring military intervention to maintain public order.
3/ Yoon’s team argues that opposition’s “chain impeachments” and budget cuts had paralysed government function, creating a crisis. They also claim investigation of election fraud allegations was effectively impossible without emergency powers.
1/ I've obtained the 101-page indictment against President Yoon Suk Yeol detailing the December 3, 2024 martial law incident. He's charged with leading an insurrection (내란우두머리).
2/ The planning began months earlier. From March/April 2024, Yoon held meetings with military leaders at his safe house in Samcheong-dong discussing "the only way forward is through emergency powers" and "the military needs to step up and take an active role".
3/ After the April 2024 parliamentary elections strengthened the opposition majority, tensions escalated. From end Nov to early Dec, Yoon and defence minister began preparing martial law documents, including proclamations, presidential addresses, and operational orders.
1/ Quite extraordinary how S. Korea's president claims sending armed troops to storm parliament was based on a copy-paste error. The martial law decree that launched one of the most serious crises in Korean democracy was apparently just... poorly proofread.hani.co.kr/arti/english_e…
2/ On Dec 3, troops with live ammunition broke into the National Assembly, smashing windows. The military deployed 57,735 rounds of ammunition. This was to "ban political activities". But Yoon now says the decree authorising this was just accidentally copied from old templates.
3/ The alleged "error"? His lawyers say the decree was copied from pre-1987 templates when presidents could dissolve parliament under military rule. They essentially claim Yoon did not noticed it still contained clauses banning parliamentary activities - now unconstitutional.
1/ North Korea's mounting casualties in Ukraine: what we learned from South Korea's spy agency briefing today, according to lawmakers who attended.
Revelations about captured soldiers, suicide orders, and the human cost of NK's support for Russia's war effort.
2/ South Korean intelligence estimates over 3,000 North Korean casualties in Ukraine:
- Around 300 dead
- Approximately 2,700 wounded
3/ Why such high casualties? NIS says:
- Poor drone targeting skills
- Reckless assault tactics without artillery support
- Limited understanding of modern warfare
- How Russia is using NK troops as expendable forces
1/ South Korea's opposition Democratic Party has issued an emergency standby order for its lawmakers to remain in the National Assembly, as tensions mount over President Yoon's impending and potential arrest.
2/ This comes after Yoon sent a letter to supporters outside his residence last night, which the party views as potentially inciting insurrection. The letter spoke of "anti-state forces" and vowed to "fight to the end".
3/ The party is particularly concerned about potential clashes during the arrest warrant execution. They say up to 500 presidential security personnel could be caught in the middle of any confrontation.