San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Law-and-order Singapore tries to cope with media mob

- By Annabelle Liang Annabelle Liang is an Associated Press writer.

SINGAPORE — The small island nation of Singapore, which prides itself on law and order, is feeling the pressure of more than 3,000 members of the media arriving for a historic summit between President Trump and North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

The heavy media presence along with stringent security measures for the summit Tuesday has added to the frenzy unusual for the laid-back tropical state.

For over a week, journalist­s have been staking out Singapore’s luxury hotels, airports and government buildings to catch a glimpse of officials involved in summit preparatio­ns.

Unruly ones already have crossed red lines. Police said they arrested two South Korean journalist­s from the national broadcaste­r KBS suspected of trespassin­g in the residence of the North Korean ambassador. Another KBS journalist and an interprete­r were also under investigat­ion.

Responding to the arrests, South Korean presidenti­al spokesman Kim Eui-kyeom urged journalist­s from his country, where the free-wheeling press is a norm, to behave. He reminded them that Singapore exercises “very strict government power,” which may not bend to diplomatic pleas.

KBS apologized for the incident in their Friday evening newscast.

The city-state is not used to a rowdy press. Most of the mainstream media are controlled by government-linked companies and independen­t news websites are wary of strict defamation laws that government leaders have used to silence critics.

Apart from journalist­s, authoritie­s also have to contend with Kim and Trump impersonat­ors.

On Friday, Kim impersonat­or Lee Howard Ho Wun was questioned by police when he arrived at Singapore’s Changi Airport. Lee, who also uses the name Howard X, said he was told to stay away from Sentosa Island, where the summit will be held, and around Shangri-La Hotel, where Trump is expected to stay. Police banned loud hailers, flags or banners over a yard long or wide in the two “special event areas.”

Lee said the police asked if he had been involved in protests around the world, including those by pro-democracy activists in Hong Kong, where he lives.

“I’ve never encountere­d this at any other country. I guess they could have deported me, but then the headline the next day would read ‘Kim Jong Un gets deported from Singapore,’ which I’m sure they wouldn’t want,” Lee said.

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