Thứ Hai, 26 tháng 3, 2018

News on Youtube Mar 26 2018

Our top story this afternoon.

South Korea's trade minister has revealed that Seoul has reached an agreement with the

U.S. to amend their free trade deal.

The positive messages out of Seoul and Washington seem to suggest the issues have been ironed

out.

Kim Hyo-sun reports.

After returning from the U.S. on Sunday,...

South Korea's trade minister Kim Hyun-jong said Seoul and Washington had reached a settlement

on revising the bilateral trade pact and steel tariff issues.

"An understanding on the FTA and steel tariffs was reached in principle with the U.S."

Kim, Seoul's point man on the trade talks, explained that uncertainties on the steel

tariff issue were effectively eliminated,... thereby enabling Korean steel products to

continue entering the U.S. market.

He also stressed that Seoul was able to defend its red line on agricultural goods,... making

clear there will be no further opening of the domestic market.

Saying the two allies have to iron out some technical matters on the working level,...

Kim added the results of the negotiations will be announced after a Cabinet meeting

on Monday.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told Fox News that the two allies reached a very

productive understanding on the FTA revision and steel tariffs.

Describing the agreement as an absolute win-win,... he said Seoul will reduce the amount of steel

shipped to the U.S.

Such messages from both parties signals Seoul and Washington could soon finalize their amendments

to the six-year-old bilateral trade deal..

Kim Hyo-sun, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> Seoul, Washington reach agreement on FTA revision: Trade Minister - Duration: 1:40.

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Marcha por la Vida en Washington - Duration: 6:07.

For more infomation >> Marcha por la Vida en Washington - Duration: 6:07.

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Trèbes, manifestation anti-armes à Washington, pesticides et manifestations - Le Billet de Charline - Duration: 2:07.

For more infomation >> Trèbes, manifestation anti-armes à Washington, pesticides et manifestations - Le Billet de Charline - Duration: 2:07.

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Seoul and Washington agree 'in principle' on FTA amendment - Duration: 2:41.

South Korea's trade minister says Seoul has reached an agreement with Washington 'in principle'

on how the two sides will amend their free trade agreement.

Korea has also secured a permanent exemption from America's new tariffs on steel.

Kim Hyesung reports.

Right after he reported to the Cabinet, South Korea's Trade Minister, Kim Hyun-jong, held

a press conference Monday to explain the results of the negotiations on the Korea-US.

Free Trade Agreement.

"Uncertainty has been growing in the global market following the U.S. plan to impose sanctions

on China, and the latest agreement has removed two of those uncertainties.

One, South Korea is exempt from the steel tariff.

Second is the Korea-U.S. Free Trade Agreement.

"

Kim, Seoul's pointman on trade talks, said South Korea is the first country to receive

an indefinite exemption from Washington's 25-percent steel tariff measures.

Currently, five countries, including Canada and Mexico, plus the EU, received a temporary

exemption from the U.S. import duties on steel and aluminum that went into effect last week.

In exchange, the U.S. will introduce a steel import ceiling.

South Korea's quota will be set at 2-point-6-8 million tons of steel exports a year, or 70%

of its average annual shipments to the U.S. between 2015 to 2017.

Seoul has also agreed to lift some of the regulations the local auto sector, enabling

U.S. automakers to ship Korea up to 50-thousand vehicles each, up from 25-thousand previously.

Tariffs imposed on Korean pickup trucks exported to the U.S will be extended by 20 years to

2041.

South Korea on the other hand, secured revisions to the investor-state dispute settlement clause

and other areas it has demanded since start of the trade talks.

We defended the red line.

There is no further opening of agricultural markets or mandatory use of U.S. auto parts.

In addition, the two sides agreed to improve the transparency of the trade dispute settlement

process, which covers issue like anti-dumping duties.

The tentative agreement comes less than three months since the first round of trade talks

began.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin also described the agreement as an absolute win-win

in an interview with Fox News Sunday, local time.

South Korea's trade ministry said working-level officials are ironing out the details so that

Seoul and Washington can finalize their amendments to the six-year-old trade deal soon.

Kim Hyesung, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> Seoul and Washington agree 'in principle' on FTA amendment - Duration: 2:41.

-------------------------------------------

Seoul and Washington agree 'in principle' on FTA amendment - Duration: 2:43.

Seoul reached an agreement with Washington 'in principle' on how the two sides will amend

their free trade deal.

Korea also secured a permanent exemption from America's new tariffs on steel.

Kim Hyesung shares with us the trade minister's remarks.

Right after he reported to the Cabinet, South Korea's Trade Minister, Kim Hyun-jong, held

a press conference Monday to explain the results of the negotiations on the Korea-US.

Free Trade Agreement.

"Uncertainty has been growing in the global market following the U.S. plan to impose sanctions

on China, and the latest agreement has removed two of those uncertainties.

One, South Korea is exempt from the steel tariff.

Second is the Korea-U.S. Free Trade Agreement.

"

Kim, Seoul's pointman on trade talks, said South Korea is the first country to receive

an indefinite exemption from Washington's 25-percent steel tariff measures.

Currently, five countries, including Canada and Mexico, plus the EU, received a temporary

exemption from the U.S. import duties on steel and aluminum that went into effect last week.

In exchange, the U.S. will introduce a steel import ceiling.

South Korea's quota will be set at 2-point-6-8 million tons of steel exports a year, or 70%

of its average annual shipments to the U.S. between 2015 to 2017.

Seoul has also agreed to lift some its safety and environmental regulations, and allow U.S.

automakers to ship Korea up to 50-thousand vehicles each, up from 25-thousand previously.

Tariffs imposed on Korean pickup trucks exported to the U.S will be extended by 20 years to

2041.

South Korea on the other hand, secured revisions to the investor-state dispute settlement clause

and other areas it has demanded since start of the trade talks.

We defended the red line.

There is no further opening of agricultural markets or mandatory use of U.S. auto parts.

In addition, the two sides agreed to improve the transparency of the trade dispute settlement

process, which covers issue like anti-dumping duties.

The tentative agreement comes less than three months since the first round of trade talks

began.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin also described the agreement as an absolute win-win

in an interview with Fox News Sunday, local time.

South Korea's trade ministry said working-level officials are ironing out the details so that

Seoul and Washington can finalize their amendments to the six-year-old trade deal soon.

Kim Hyesung, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> Seoul and Washington agree 'in principle' on FTA amendment - Duration: 2:43.

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서해에서 전투기 이착함 훈련중인 미 항모 George Washington함 | 한국의 군사력 - Duration: 3:35.

For more infomation >> 서해에서 전투기 이착함 훈련중인 미 항모 George Washington함 | 한국의 군사력 - Duration: 3:35.

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Thousands Of Teens To Descend On Washington For Historic March Against Gun Violence - Duration: 9:11.

Thousands Of Teens To Descend On Washington For Historic March Against Gun Violence

14k   57.

WASHINGTON — The student-led national movement against gun violence will face its most high-profile moment on Saturday: As many as 500,000 people are expected to march in the nation's capital to demand political action on gun control, and sibling marches are set to take place around the country.

The March For Our Lives in Washington, D.C.

― which students from Parkland, Florida, began planning after 17 people at their high school were killed last month in a mass shooting ― boasts high-profile donors and celebrity attendees, and has inspired other communities around the U.S.

to plan events.  "We have never lived in a world where there weren't major school shootings," said Kate Lebrun, 18.

"It should have been enough a long time ago, enough for people to start doing this amount of stuff.

I realized if we don't start now, it's never going to happen." More than 150,000 students in the U.S.

have experienced a shooting on campus since the Columbine High School massacre in 1999, according to a Washington Post analysis.

Lebrun and a few other students from Walter Johnson High School in Bethesda, Maryland, helped coordinate lodging for teens who are coming to D.C.

for the march but might have trouble finding or affording a hotel room.  Teens are expected to travel to Washington from all over the country, and some area restaurants are offering free or discounted meals to student activists. More than 100 GoFundMe campaigns have sprung up to organize bus trips to marches in major cities, according to a spokesperson for the crowdfunding platform.

Mario Tama via Getty Images Young activists paint signs to be carried at the March For Our Lives in Los Angeles.

Lilly Pribish, a 17-year-old high school junior from outside of St.

Louis, plans to attend the march by herself and stay with family in the D.C.

area.

"Having Congress and the people in power right now see how many people are supporting these victims of gun violence … hopefully that pushes the fact that there needs to be a change," she said.

"This is serious now — like, it's not a joke, and there's a lot of people that are done with seeing issues like this on the news." March For Our Lives Action Fund, the 501(c)(4) nonprofit connected to the event, has raised millions of dollars.

The money is covering expenses associated with the D.C.

march, but will also be used to lobby for gun safety legislation.

It's not clear what those legislative priorities are yet, and it's likely they will continue to evolve.

A board of directors, which includes public servants, legal experts and professionals, will work with a student advisory board to make decisions on how to spend the money, a spokesperson told HuffPost.

  As a 17-year-old, I really don't have a voice in Congress or in politics because there's not much I can do.

If there's an opportunity for my voice to be heard, to do something, I'm going to take that.

Lilly Pribish, student Top Republican lawmakers have so far shown little appetite for major reforms.

Generating the political will to take more forceful steps, like mandating universal background checks and banning assault-style weapons — two priorities of the student activists from Parkland — is likely to be a tough road.

Both proposals have failed to gain traction after prior mass shootings.

The only congressional legislation that currently has broad bipartisan support is the Fix NICS Act, which aims to reform the National Instant Criminal Background Check System by improving data collection for state and national law enforcement agencies.

Capitol Hill leaders included the limited step in this week's government spending agreement, which also features language that would lift a long-standing ban on federal gun violence research.

In addition to supporting Fix NICS, President Donald Trump released a minimal set of proposals, largely backed by the National Rifle Association.

He has backpedaled after boasting that he would stand up to the NRA and suggesting he might be open to measures such as raising the minimum age for gun purchases, which the NRA opposes.

But students planning to attend Saturday's march in Washington told HuffPost that they hoped the event ― and the "the sheer volume" of activists coming out to protest gun violence, as Pribish said ― could start to move the needle.  "I hope that there will be real change, instead of this bogus [proposal] that the president has put forth, which doesn't even mention assault weapons at all," said John Papanier, a 17-year-old high school senior from Staten Island, New York.

"I'm talking real laws.

They're just trying to quiet us with a joke of a [proposal]." Jim Bourg / Reuters Students in Washington during the National School Walkout on March 14.

It's unclear how many counter-rallies might take place.

Spokespeople for the Second Amendment Foundation and the National Association for Gun Rights told HuffPost earlier this month that they were not aware of any.

News reports have since indicated that protests planned in Indiana, Montana (dubbed "March For Our Guns") and Utah ("March Before Our Lives").

In New Jersey, parents reportedly plan to rally for armed security officers in schools.

March For Our Lives will help gauge whether students can sustain the momentum of their movement and push lawmakers to act. The event follows last week's National School Walkout, when high school students around the country left class to hold a moment of silence for the Parkland victims.

Students are planning a similar walkout on April 20, the 19th anniversary of the shooting at Columbine.

Perhaps the biggest test of this activism is still to come: It has yet to be seen whether the momentum can make it to the ballot box.

But for now, teens — some of whom can't even vote yet — are leading that charge and refusing to stay quiet.  "As a 17-year-old, I really don't have a voice in Congress or in politics because there's not much I can do," Pribish said.

"If there's an opportunity for my voice to be heard, to do something, I'm going to take that."    .

Do you have information you want to share with HuffPost? Here's how.

  PHOTO GALLERY Students Walkout To Protest Gun Violence  .

For more infomation >> Thousands Of Teens To Descend On Washington For Historic March Against Gun Violence - Duration: 9:11.

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Seoul, Washington reach agreement on FTA revision: Trade Minister - Duration: 1:38.

South Korea's trade minister has revealed that Seoul has reached an agreement with the

U.S. to amend their free trade deal.

The U.S. Treasury Secretary also confirmed that the two allies have reached a very productive

understanding,... hinting a final agreement could come soon.

Kim Hyo-sun reports.

After returning from the U.S. on Sunday,...

South Korea's trade minister Kim Hyun-jong said Seoul and Washington had reached a settlement

on revising the bilateral trade pact and steel tariff issues.

"An understanding on the FTA and steel tariffs was reached in principle with the U.S."

Kim, Seoul's point man on the trade talks, explained that uncertainties on the steel

tariff issue were effectively eliminated,... thereby enabling Korean steel products to

continue entering the U.S. market.

He also stressed that Seoul was able to defend its red line on agricultural goods,... making

clear there will be no further opening of the domestic market.

Saying the two allies have to iron out some technical matters on the working level,...

Kim added the results of the negotiations will be announced after a Cabinet meeting

on Monday.

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told Fox News that the two allies reached a very

productive understanding on the FTA revision and steel tariffs.

Describing the agreement as an absolute win-win,... he said Seoul will reduce the amount of steel

shipped to the U.S.

Such messages from both parties signals Seoul and Washington could soon finalize their amendments

to the six-year-old bilateral trade deal..

Kim Hyo-sun, Arirang News.

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