The Borneo Post (Sabah)

South Korea to restrict anti-Trump rallies

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SEOUL: South Korean police will restrict public rallies near the country’s presidenti­al palace during Donald Trump’s first visit as head of state, a report said yesterday, reducing his chances of being exposed to opposition.

It is the first time that Seoul has imposed limits on public gatherings since President Moon Jae-In, a former human rights lawyer, took power in May, according to the Yonhap news agency.

Organisers of around 50 protests — mostly anti-Trump rallies — applied to hold the demonstrat­ions across Seoul but police turned down most requests to gather near the presidenti­al Blue House, citing security concerns, Yonhap said.

Police granted two requests in the security area — one of them a pro-US meeting to welcome Trump — ‘to ensure freedom of assembly’, it added.

One of Moon’s campaign promises was restoring freedom of expression and assembly seen to have eroded under his conservati­ve predecesso­r, Park Geun-Hye, who was impeached over a corruption scandal.

Heavy security is expected in the capital for Trump’s Nov 7-8 trip, during which he will hold a summit with Moon — whom he has accused of ‘appeasemen­t’ towards the nuclear-armed North — and visit a US army base.

The South is a key US ally and hosts 28,500 American troops, but many of Trump’s critics in the country see him as a warmonger whose war of words with North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un has escalated tensions.

The North conducted a sixth nuclear test in September and has launched multiple missiles capable of reaching the US mainland.

And the two leaders have traded threats and personal insults in recent months, heightenin­g global alarm about potential conflict.

Trump is also due to visit Japan, China, Vietnam and the Philippine­s during his first Asia tour since taking office in January, with all eyes on his message to the North and Kim.

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