She says she won't give up because she wants to be free of "things like discrimination at work… and live my life in peace".
She believes his popularity "among certain sections of young men is one of the "significant repercussions" of South Korea "long neglecting structural discrimination" against women.The only candidate to address the issue, 61-year-old Kwon Young-gook, didn't fare well in early polling.
"I'm still deliberating whether to vote for Lee Jae-myung or Kwon Young-gook," Saeyeon says.While Kwon represents her concerns, she says it's smart to shore up the votes for Lee because she is "much more afraid of the next election, and the one after that".She is thinking about Lee Jun-seok, who some analysts believe could eat into the votes of a beleagured PPP, while appealing to Yoon's base: "He is in the spotlight and as the youngest candidate, he could have a long career ahead."
That is all the more reason to keep speaking out, Byunghui says. "It's like there is dust on the wall. If you don't know it's there, you can walk by, but once you see it, it sticks with you."It's the same for Jinha who says things can "never go back to how they were before Yoon declared martial law".
That was a time when politics felt inaccessible, but now, Jinha adds, it "feels like something that affects me and is important to my life".
She says she won't give up because she wants to be free of "things like discrimination at work… and live my life in peace".Some 17,000 people have evacuated the Canadian province of Manitoba as fast-moving wildfires move across parts of the country.
A military aircraft and helicopters have been used to evacuate some residents in remote areas as firefighters face growing flames. Hot and dry weather is expected in the coming days.Dense smoke from the fires - of which there are more than 188 according to officials - has spread across Canada and into parts of the US.
Both Saskatchewan and Manitoba have declared states of emergency for the next month and have asked for international help in fighting the fires.In Saskatchewan, there are 17