South Korean President Lee Jae-myung meets Singapore PM Lawrence Wong and Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. at summits to boost trade, infrastructure, and AI ties.
South Korean President Lee Jae-myung meets Singapore PM Lawrence Wong and Philippines President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. at summits to boost trade, infrastructure, and AI ties.
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President Lee to pay state visits to Singapore and Philippines next week

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South Korean President Lee Jae-myung will pay state visits to Singapore and the Philippines next week for summit talks aimed at expanding cooperation with these Southeast Asian nations. In Singapore, he will hold talks with Prime Minister Lawrence Wong, and in the Philippines, with President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. Cheong Wa Dae anticipates strengthened ties in trade, infrastructure, and sectors like AI.

Cheong Wa Dae announced on February 27 that President Lee Jae-myung will pay state visits to Singapore and the Philippines next week. Lee will depart for Singapore on Sunday, March 1, for a three-day stay, holding summit talks with Prime Minister Lawrence Wong and meeting ceremonial President Tharman Shanmugaratnam on Monday. This marks their second summit since their first meeting in early November during Wong's visit to South Korea for the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) summit, when the two nations upgraded relations to a strategic partnership.

Presidential spokesperson Kang Yu-jung stated in a written briefing, "In light of Lee's visit to Singapore, the two nations are expected to strengthen cooperation in trade, investment and infrastructure, and broaden the collaboration in promising sectors, such as artificial intelligence (AI) and nuclear power." She noted that Lee will attend a business forum to engage with AI industry leaders.

On Tuesday, March 3, Lee will travel to Manila for a summit with Philippine President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. the same day, also attending a business forum. This is Lee's second summit with Marcos following their meeting on the sidelines of the APEC summit in Gyeongju in late October. Kang said, "In light of Lee's visit to the Philippines, the two nations will deepen practical cooperation in the defense industry, infrastructure and trade, and solidify the foundation for collaboration in promising sectors, including nuclear power, shipbuilding, critical minerals and AI."

Cheong Wa Dae hopes the trip will promote coordination with key Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) members on the international stage and pave the way for deeper ties with the regional bloc. President Lee and first lady Kim Hae-kyung were seen waving before departing from Seoul Air Base in Seongnam, Gyeonggi Province, on January 13.

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Initial reactions on X to President Lee Jae-myung's announced state visits to Singapore and the Philippines are predominantly neutral, with Korean and Philippine news outlets sharing details on planned summits and cooperation in trade, infrastructure, AI, nuclear power, and shipbuilding. A skeptical regular user questions the timing, suggesting it avoids expected protests on Samiljeol (March 1). Philippine media highlights strengthened bilateral ties amid ASEAN chairmanship.

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President Lee Jae-myung waves from presidential plane at Seoul airport, departing for Singapore and Philippines to boost trade and cooperation.
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President Lee Jae Myung departs for Singapore on two-nation Southeast Asia swing

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President Lee Jae Myung departed from Seoul on Sunday, March 1, for a two-nation swing to Singapore and the Philippines to expand cooperation with the Southeast Asian nations. The visit focuses on boosting trade, investment, infrastructure, and collaboration in sectors like artificial intelligence and nuclear energy. Cheong Wa Dae hopes the trip will enhance coordination with key Association of Southeast Asian Nations members and foster deeper ties with the regional bloc.

President Lee Jae Myung held summit talks with Singaporean Prime Minister Lawrence Wong on March 2, agreeing to launch negotiations to upgrade their bilateral free trade agreement and enhance artificial intelligence cooperation. The meeting, the second in four months, focused on strengthening existing ties in trade, investment, and infrastructure while expanding into future-oriented areas like AI and nuclear energy. The two nations signed five memorandums of understanding in AI, small modular reactors, digital, and science and technology fields.

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President Lee Jae Myung and Brazilian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva are set to hold summit talks on Monday. Lula is scheduled to arrive in Seoul on Sunday, marking his first state visit to South Korea in 21 years. The leaders are expected to discuss strengthening bilateral cooperation in areas such as trade, investment, and climate.

President Lee Jae-myung and Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk are set to hold summit talks on Monday. The leaders will discuss expanding bilateral cooperation, focusing on the defense industry. Tusk's visit marks the first by a Polish prime minister in 27 years.

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Following $16 million in consumer goods export deals and seven MOUs signed earlier in the visit, Philippine and South Korean firms inked additional agreements at a forum attended by Presidents Ferdinand Marcos Jr. and Lee Jae-myung on March 4. Marcos highlighted partnerships in shipbuilding, nuclear energy, aerospace, critical minerals, supply chain, retail, and health sectors as key to economic ties.

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