South Korean evacuations from Middle East amid crisis, with market stabilization and oil security efforts illustrated realistically.
South Korean evacuations from Middle East amid crisis, with market stabilization and oil security efforts illustrated realistically.
Image générée par IA

South Korea ramps up evacuations, market stabilization amid escalating Middle East crisis

Image générée par IA

As Middle East tensions worsen after U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran—with no Korean casualties reported—South Korea is prioritizing evacuations for 21,000 nationals in the region, stabilizing plunging markets, and securing oil amid Strait of Hormuz closure fears. This follows initial assurances of stable energy supplies.

Tensions escalated further after Iran's retaliatory strikes and Strait of Hormuz closure, with Israeli responses in Lebanon widening the conflict. Building on earlier government assessments of stable oil and gas reserves (see prior coverage), Prime Minister Kim Min-seok's Cabinet meeting emphasized protecting nationals as the top priority.

The Foreign Ministry reports 59 Koreans in Iran, 616 in Israel (excluding embassy staff), and about 21,000 across 13 Middle Eastern countries, including 4,000 short-term visitors in the UAE. Airspace closures in multiple countries prompted urgings for commercial evacuations, embassy assistance, Defense Ministry transport aircraft on standby, and a 24-hour National Intelligence Service emergency team.

Markets reacted sharply: KOSPI fell 7.24% to 5,791.91, the won weakened to 1,466.1 against the dollar. With 70.7% of oil and 20.4% of LNG from the region, the government is sourcing alternatives and preparing a 100 trillion won ($68.4 billion) stabilization fund. Around 40 Korean vessels near the strait were redirected. Citibank projects a 0.45-point GDP growth cut if oil exceeds $82/barrel.

Samsung Electronics and others evacuated staff from high-risk areas to safer neighbors and mandated remote work in UAE, Iraq, and Qatar. Round-the-clock market monitoring continues.

Ce que les gens disent

X discussions focus on South Korea's high dependency on Middle East oil via the Strait of Hormuz, fears of economic fallout including stock plunges and GDP hits, preparations to evacuate around 21,000 nationals, and security concerns like THAAD redeployment. Sentiments include alarm over energy shocks, criticism of political stances, and some optimism about long-term gains for U.S. allies.

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Illustration depicting South Korea's stable oil and gas supplies despite Iran crisis and Strait of Hormuz risks.
Image générée par IA

Iran crisis leaves Korea's oil and gas supplies stable

Rapporté par l'IA Image générée par IA

Amid U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran that killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the Korean government stated that oil and gas supplies remain stable for now. Emergency meetings confirmed reserves of several months' worth of oil and gas exceeding mandatory levels. However, preparations are underway for potential risks from the Strait of Hormuz closure, including alternative routes and support measures.

As the U.S.-Israel Operation Epic Fury against Iran's leadership expands—with Iranian retaliation, Hezbollah, and Houthi involvement—the conflict's fallout intensifies for South Korea. Stocks plunged further Wednesday, oil prices rose amid Strait of Hormuz threats, and policymakers urge preparations for prolonged instability, building on prior evacuations and stabilization measures.

Rapporté par l'IA

The Korea Exchange (KRX) on Tuesday triggered a sell-side circuit breaker, halting trading for five minutes after a sharp drop in the KOSPI 200 Futures index amid market fears over U.S. and Israeli airstrikes on Iran. The index fell 5.09 percent to 890.05, marking the first such event since January 6. Escalating Middle East tensions are rippling through South Korea's stock market.

Des frappes aériennes américano-israéliennes au cours du week-end ont tué le Guide suprême de l’Iran, l’ayatollah Ali Khamenei, provoquant une riposte iranienne dans toute la région et la fermeture du détroit d’Ormuz. Cette escalade a fait grimper les prix du pétrole au-dessus de 85 dollars le baril, le niveau le plus élevé depuis juillet 2024, en raison des craintes de perturbations des flux énergétiques. Les marchés mondiaux ont réagi par une chute des actions et une hausse des prix des matières premières.

Rapporté par l'IA

Suite aux frappes américaines et israéliennes sur l'Iran qui ont tué le Guide suprême Ali Khamenei et provoqué des perturbations dans le détroit d'Ormuz, les prix du pétrole ont grimpé de près de 8 % au milieu des tensions persistantes. Les marchés indiens ont perdu 6,35 lakh crore de roupies mardi, la roupie s'affaiblissant par crainte de problèmes d'approvisionnement. À l'échelle mondiale, le dollar s'est renforcé comme valeur refuge tandis que le yen et l'euro se sont affaiblis.

Following the US-Israel strikes that killed Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on February 28, 2026, Iran has closed the Strait of Hormuz, spiking global energy prices and markets. A triumvirate has taken provisional control in Tehran as missile exchanges and naval losses intensify regional tensions.

Rapporté par l'IA

Following initial US and Israeli strikes on Iran on February 28, 2026, weekend attacks reportedly killed Ayatollah Ali Jamenei, prompting Iran's Revolutionary Guard to threaten closing the Strait of Hormuz. Mexico's export mix hit $66.63 per barrel on March 2—the highest in seven months—as global markets reacted with risk aversion; Mexico activated a gasoline price contingency plan.

 

 

 

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