This photo shows Prime Minister Kim Min-seok visiting Gyeongju, some 330 kilometers southeast of Seoul, to check the country's preparation for the upcoming Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit on Friday. (Yonhap)
This photo shows Prime Minister Kim Min-seok visiting Gyeongju, some 330 kilometers southeast of Seoul, to check the country's preparation for the upcoming Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit on Friday. (Yonhap)

Prime Minister Kim Min-seok on Sunday welcomed medical students' decision to return to school after a 17-month boycott of classes in protest of the previous government's medical reform plan as a "big step forward."

An association of medical students announced Saturday they will return to school after boycotting classes since February last year in protest of the previous Yoon Suk Yeol administration's plan to increase medical school enrollment by 2,000 starting this year.

"(Their decision) marks a big step forward and it is a relief," Kim wrote on his Facebook page, adding he will make efforts to find a solution to the issue.

"President (Lee Jae Myung) also has contemplated a solution and instructed me and the government to find ways to address it. What the people wants will matter," he said.

The education ministry earlier announced that 8,305 students in 40 medical schools nationwide will be subject to grade retention, requiring them to repeat the same academic year alongside younger students.

While the government later reversed course and decided to return the 2026 quota to the original level of approximately 3,000, many trainee doctors and medical students have not yet fully returned to hospitals and schools. (Yonhap)