Presidential Chief of Staff Kang Hoon-sik announced that negotiations with Washington had concluded successfully. "South Korea plans to send a charter plane to bring the workers home as soon as the remaining administrative steps are completed," he was quoted as saying by the Associated Press.
Details of the negotiations were not immediately revealed.
The raid took place on Thursday (September 4) when US immigration authorities, supported by hundreds of federal agents, moved in on Hyundai's electric vehicle
Also read | South Korea expresses 'concern' over US immigration raid at Hyundai's Georgia plant
The operation is the latest in a series of workplace raids linked to the Trump administration's strict deportation drive. However, Thursday's raid stood out for its sheer scale and for
Footage released by US Immigration and Customs Enforcement showed convoys of federal vehicles entering the site, before workers were ordered outside. Some were searched with their hands against a bus and shackled around their wrists, ankles and waist.
South Korea vowed to support over 300 of its citizens who were arrested after a US immigration raid on a Hyundai Motor car battery facility in Georgia https://t.co/xvCwgfQEBY pic.twitter.com/rP4Duj1Ya4
— Reuters (@Reuters) September 7, 2025
However, US authorities confirmed that the focus of the raid was a Hyundai–LG Energy Solution battery plant, currently under construction, which will supply
Most of those detained were transferred to an immigration detention centre in Folkston, near the Florida border. Steven Schrank, Georgia's lead agent for Homeland Security Investigations, told reporters on September 5 that none of the detainees had been charged with a crime so far. "The investigation is ongoing," he added, AP reported.
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Seoul reacted swiftly, voicing
(With inputs from agencies)