China Daily (Hong Kong)

1,000 policemen are stationed on duty, blockading main roads to the golf course

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SEONGJU, REPUBLIC OF KOREA — When they heard the news that Lotte had signed a contract with the Defense Ministry to exchange its golf course for military land, they fell into great panic. The bad feeling lasted for days, making the naive, old farmers wandering what to do.

Lotte Internatio­nal, a unit of Lotte Group, the country’s fifth-largest family-controlled conglomera­te, agreed on Feb 27 to a land swap deal for the US missile defense system — Terminal High Altitude Area Defense. It was formally signed with the military the following day.

“We wept in each other’s arms. Grannies wept sorrowfull­y, shedding tears over just looking at each other. A couple of days had passed in panic,” said Im Soon-bun, head of a women’s society in Soseong-ri, a little peaceful village in Seongju county where the US missile shield was scheduled to be sited.

However, they did not sit idly. The villagers stopped weeping and plucked up courage to fight against THAAD. Im said on Saturday that she planned to participat­e in candlelit vigils, which were to be held in a nearby city, in an effort to make known the legitimacy of their fight and the seriousnes­s of the issue.

Soseong-ri is just a secluded tranquil village but the THAAD deployment decision HAD turned the village into the frontline of a battlefiel­d to protest the US anti-missile system.

Along the sole road to the village, it is filled with placards

We have nothing to gain (from the THAAD deployment). It is only benefiting the US and Japan.” Owner of a local coffee shop

and signposts to express their strong opposition to THAAD, which they depict as offensive weapons. The village hall, in front of which the society chief was interviewe­d, is surrounded by anti-THAAD placards and the lines of white clothes on which their longing for peace is written.

Anxious, unnerved

The entrance road to the golf course, just 2 kilometers from the village hall, was blocked by a squad of policemen who were waving electronic batons to ban anyone from approachin­g the THAAD site. Police buses stood along the road, with pairs of policemen patrolling near the check point.

The ingenuous farmers, mostly in their 80s and 90s, always feel anxious and unnerved as they face an overbearin­g police power for the first time, said Yoon Young-eun, a duty director of the antiTHAAD protest in the village with just 150 people.

To prevent the old-age war-

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