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No time to relax for South Korean opponents of controversial US anti-missile system

Hundreds of protesters camp along a road to a country club that is basing a powerful new US anti-missile system

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A child stands near a protest banner at Seongju in South Korea, the location for the deployment of Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) anti-missile system. Photo: Liu Zhen

The first week of May is usually a low-key time for South Koreans to relax but it was no time for a holiday near the Lotte Skyhill Seongju Country Club in North Gyeongsang province on Saturday.

Hundreds of protesters camped at a site along a road into the country club to oppose the deployment of the a powerful new US anti-missile system.

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The club is the site of the contentious Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD) system, a US-built anti-missile array meant to shield the South from growing threats from Pyongyang but has raised Beijing’s hackles due to its ability to peer deep into China.

People in South Korea’s Seongju county, where was selected as the location for the deployment of Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD), stage protest against the missile defence system. Photo: Liu Zhen
People in South Korea’s Seongju county, where was selected as the location for the deployment of Terminal High Altitude Area Defence (THAAD), stage protest against the missile defence system. Photo: Liu Zhen
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The system has also raised the ire of many South Koreans who claim it undermines the security of their country, a message made clear in the protesters’ banners.

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