SIngapore – Kim Jong Un Impersonator Says Detained For Hours At Singapore Airport

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    Kim Jong Un and Donald Trump impersonators, Howard X, left, and Dennis Alan, right, pose for photographs at the Merlion Park, a popular tourist destination in Singapore, on Friday, June 8, 2018. Kim Jong Un lookalike who uses the name Howard X said he was detained and questioned upon his arrival in Singapore on Friday, days before a summit between the North Korean leader and President Donald Trump. (AP Photo/Wong Maye-E)Singapore – An Australian comedian known for impersonating North Korean leader Kim Jong Un said he was detained by Singapore’s authorities on Friday and questioned about his political views.

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    Singapore’s immigration and checkpoints authority and the Singapore police did not immediately have comment. The incident came just days before the city-state hosts high stakes talks between U.S. and North Korea’s leaders.

    Howard X, who declined to give his real name, told Reuters he was detained for two hours and questioned for around 30 minutes when he arrived in the early morning hours at Singapore’s Changi Airport.

    “(They) asked me what my political views were and if I have been involved with protests in other countries,” he said, adding that he was told to stay away from Sentosa Island and the Shangri-La, two areas that are designated ‘special event areas’ for the summit.

    “They said, ‘It’s the Trump-Kim summit, you’ve come at a very sensitive time.'”

    Howard X was in Singapore late last month, posing as Kim Jong Un against a backdrop of the city’s bay which features sites such as the Merlion and the iconic Marina Bay Sands Hotel.

    He said he is planning similar stunts for the purpose of political satire in the coming days, this time in tow with Donald Trump impersonator Dennis Alan. He said he is not planning any protests.

    Rights groups have criticized Singapore’s laws that they say limit critical speech and peaceful assembly.

    For example, protests have to be pre-approved and are allowed only at a designated downtown area called the Speakers’ Corner.

    Singapore has held the position that its laws and regulations are needed to maintain social order and harmony.


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