The major media outlets in Japan were particularly interested in President Moon Jae-in's reorganization on the previous day, with former Cheong Wa Dae president Min Jung-su appointed to the Minister of Justice and Choi Ki-young (64), Seoul National University's professor of electrical and information engineering, as Minister of Science and ICT. I reported it.

The Mainichi newspaper said in an article titled "The Korean Attorney General's hard line against Japan," Moon said that he had partially reorganized and revealed the 'reform color' ahead of the April general election.

The newspaper said that the Attorney General's report is known as a "strong Japanese" group, criticizing it as "national" by discussing Japanese titles in certain Korean newspapers on Facebook in the middle of last month, when conflicts between Korea and Japan over the issue of export restrictions were heightened.

Mr. Cho said he had a consistent stance that he should respect the Korean Supreme Court ruling that ordered reparations to Japanese recruiting companies.

Mr. Mainichi said that he was a semiconductor expert for the Minister of Justice, and that he was in charge of promoting localization against the Japanese government's export of semiconductor materials.

The newspaper briefly said Foreign Minister Kang Kyung-hwa, who was once a replacement, was suspended.

The Asahi Shimbun reported that he was known to have been at the forefront of criticism against the Japanese government in response to Cho's post on Facebook that he "insulted Korean sovereignty and undermined free trade."

The newspaper added that Mr. Cho was motivated to pursue tasks such as prosecution reform, citing General Yi Sun-sin's passage of time, which defeated Toyotomi Hideyoshi's invasion of Chosun after the announcement of internal affairs.

Tokyo Newspaper criticized the Moon Jae-in government, including the South Koreans, who wrote the face of the Supreme Court ruling that Cho ordered reimbursement for "negligence, criticism, distortion, and selling." Introduced the criticism of the media.

Right-wing Sankei Shimbun believes the prosecution reform will be speeded up by the use of the extraordinary attorney general for Cho, who served as the director of the Judicial Surveillance Center.

Sankei analyzed the background of Choi's selection as a response card to counter the Japanese government's export restrictions on semiconductor materials.

(Photo: Blue House, Yonhap News)