SEOUL, Nov. 14 (Yonhap) -- South Korea and Australia will seek joint measures to crack down on prostitution by South Korean women in the latter country, Seoul's foreign ministry said Monday.
Moon Ha-yong, ambassador for overseas Koreans and consular affairs, will meet with his Australian counterparts in Canberra later in the day to discuss the issue, the ministry said.
"About 1,000 South Korean women in Australia are engaged in the sex trade, and most of them are abusing their working-holiday visas," the ambassador told Yonhap News Agency by phone. "As these people are disrupting two-way exchanges in economic and human resources, our two countries will work together to develop countermeasures."
Working-holiday visas allow holders to travel and work in either country for up to one year.
The two sides are also expected to discuss other issues of mutual interest, such as the signing of an agreement to recognize each other's driver's licenses.
hague@yna.co.kr
(END)
- Lee's state visit to U.S. a celebration of ever-strengthening alliance
- FTA approval marks start of new era in alliance
- Box-office hit sheds new light on sex crimes against disabled students
- S. Korea's Cabinet shakeup raises cautious hope for better ties with N. Korea
- Lee wins Olympics, African foothold during 10-day summit diplomacy
- Lee's tireless behind-the-scenes campaign for PyeongChang bears big fruit
- President, opposition leader meet, with little progress
- Lee tightening discipline in officialdom amid series of corruption cases
- Row simmering over role of SNS in S. Korea
Home > National > Politics/Diplomacy