Chung Jin-suk, the interim leader of South Korea’s ruling People Power Party, has been derided for sharing a photo of a broken Ghana chocolate bar ahead of his home team’s Qatar World Cup football game against the West African nation. “Ghana… [We] will crush you like this tonight,” Chung wrote on Facebook hours before kick-off on Monday. Ghana, however, dashed.
Rep. Chung Jin-suk, the interim chief of the ruling conservative People Power Party (PPP), uploaded a photo of a broken Ghana chocolate bar made by Lotte Confectionery on social media on Monday, hours before the Korean national football team s match against the African nation.“Ghana… (We) will crush you like this tonight,” he wrote with a smile emoji.
Rep. Chung Jin-suk, the interim chief of the ruling conservative People Power Party (PPP), uploaded a photo of a broken Ghana chocolate bar made by Lotte Confectionery on social media on Monday, hours before the Korean national football team s match against the African nation.“Ghana… (We) will crush you like this tonight,” he wrote with a smile emoji.
Ahead of regular executive appointments scheduled for the end of this year, tension is rising internally at Korea s big three retailers: Shinsegae, Lotte Shopping and Hyundai Department Store. Companies have been agonizing over whether or not to keep their CEOs amid the current uncertain business environment caused by high inflation and the depreciation of the Korean currency against the U.S. dollar.
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