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Nouveau texte de la page, après la modification (new_wikitext) | <br>By Hyonhee Shin and Jack Kim<br> <br>SEOUL, March 10 (Reuters) - Conservative South Korean opposition candidate Yoon Suk-yeol was elected president on Wednesday in one of the closest fought races in recent history which will shape Asia's fourth-largest economy for the next five years.<br> <br>Yoon, from the main opposition People Power Party, edged out the ruling Democratic Party's Lee Jae-myung with 48.6% of the vote to 47.8%, with more than 98% of the ballots counted as of 4.20 a.m.<br><br>on Thursday (1920 GMT Wednesday).<br> <br>Lee conceded defeat and congratulated his opponent.<br> <br>"I did my best, but failed to live up to your expectations," he told a news conference, blaming his "shortcomings".<br> <br>"The president-elect, I desperately ask you to overcome divisions and conflicts and open an era of integration and unity."<br> <br>Yoon had yet to make an official acceptance speech.<br>But as he left home for campaign headquarters, he said it had been a "very long night" and thanked hundreds of supporters who gathered in front of his home.<br> <br>The unusually bitter election campaign was marred by scandals and smears, but the policy stakes are high for the country of 52 million.<br> <br>Around 77% of South Korea's 44 million eligible voters cast ballots to pick the leader of a nation whose global status is rising even as it has been riven by gender and generational divisions, while facing a confrontational North Korea.<br> <br>The winner must tackle challenges including South Korea's worst wave of COVID-19 infections, growing inequality and surging home prices, while navigating an increasingly tense rivalry between China and the United States.<br> <br>Voters also want the new president to root out graft and pursue negotiations to curb North Korea's nuclear ambitions.<br> <br>(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin and Jack Kim; Additional reporting by Josh Smith, [https://kwork.ru/links/1017228/progon-khrumerom Прогон хрумером сайта] Daewoung Kim and Yeni Seo; Editing by Nick Macfie)<br> |
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+<br>By Hyonhee Shin and Jack Kim<br> <br>SEOUL, March 10 (Reuters) - Conservative South Korean opposition candidate Yoon Suk-yeol was elected president on Wednesday in one of the closest fought races in recent history which will shape Asia's fourth-largest economy for the next five years.<br> <br>Yoon, from the main opposition People Power Party, edged out the ruling Democratic Party's Lee Jae-myung with 48.6% of the vote to 47.8%, with more than 98% of the ballots counted as of 4.20 a.m.<br><br>on Thursday (1920 GMT Wednesday).<br> <br>Lee conceded defeat and congratulated his opponent.<br> <br>"I did my best, but failed to live up to your expectations," he told a news conference, blaming his "shortcomings".<br> <br>"The president-elect, I desperately ask you to overcome divisions and conflicts and open an era of integration and unity."<br> <br>Yoon had yet to make an official acceptance speech.<br>But as he left home for campaign headquarters, he said it had been a "very long night" and thanked hundreds of supporters who gathered in front of his home.<br> <br>The unusually bitter election campaign was marred by scandals and smears, but the policy stakes are high for the country of 52 million.<br> <br>Around 77% of South Korea's 44 million eligible voters cast ballots to pick the leader of a nation whose global status is rising even as it has been riven by gender and generational divisions, while facing a confrontational North Korea.<br> <br>The winner must tackle challenges including South Korea's worst wave of COVID-19 infections, growing inequality and surging home prices, while navigating an increasingly tense rivalry between China and the United States.<br> <br>Voters also want the new president to root out graft and pursue negotiations to curb North Korea's nuclear ambitions.<br> <br>(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin and Jack Kim; Additional reporting by Josh Smith, [https://kwork.ru/links/1017228/progon-khrumerom Прогон хрумером сайта] Daewoung Kim and Yeni Seo; Editing by Nick Macfie)<br>
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Lignes ajoutées lors de la modification (added_lines) | <br>By Hyonhee Shin and Jack Kim<br> <br>SEOUL, March 10 (Reuters) - Conservative South Korean opposition candidate Yoon Suk-yeol was elected president on Wednesday in one of the closest fought races in recent history which will shape Asia's fourth-largest economy for the next five years.<br> <br>Yoon, from the main opposition People Power Party, edged out the ruling Democratic Party's Lee Jae-myung with 48.6% of the vote to 47.8%, with more than 98% of the ballots counted as of 4.20 a.m.<br><br>on Thursday (1920 GMT Wednesday).<br> <br>Lee conceded defeat and congratulated his opponent.<br> <br>"I did my best, but failed to live up to your expectations," he told a news conference, blaming his "shortcomings".<br> <br>"The president-elect, I desperately ask you to overcome divisions and conflicts and open an era of integration and unity."<br> <br>Yoon had yet to make an official acceptance speech.<br>But as he left home for campaign headquarters, he said it had been a "very long night" and thanked hundreds of supporters who gathered in front of his home.<br> <br>The unusually bitter election campaign was marred by scandals and smears, but the policy stakes are high for the country of 52 million.<br> <br>Around 77% of South Korea's 44 million eligible voters cast ballots to pick the leader of a nation whose global status is rising even as it has been riven by gender and generational divisions, while facing a confrontational North Korea.<br> <br>The winner must tackle challenges including South Korea's worst wave of COVID-19 infections, growing inequality and surging home prices, while navigating an increasingly tense rivalry between China and the United States.<br> <br>Voters also want the new president to root out graft and pursue negotiations to curb North Korea's nuclear ambitions.<br> <br>(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin and Jack Kim; Additional reporting by Josh Smith, [https://kwork.ru/links/1017228/progon-khrumerom Прогон хрумером сайта] Daewoung Kim and Yeni Seo; Editing by Nick Macfie)<br>
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