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Donald Trump arrives in S Korea with focus on Pyongyang

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…As Robert Mugabe sacks vice-president to clear path to power for wife***

US President Donald Trump has landed in South Korea, with the North’s nuclear ambitions high on his agenda.

He flew in from Tokyo, after saying on Monday that Japan could shoot down Pyongyang’s missiles with US equipment.

Trade will also be a key focus for Mr Trump, who wants fresh terms for the US-South Korea free trade agreement.

He will meet President Moon Jae-in, US troops, and local politicians. Mr Trump is currently on a five-nation tour of Asia, his first as president.

Prior to his departure for South Korea, Mr Trump tweeted that “massive military and energy orders” from Japan were happening, and also praised Mr Moon.

Though the US President will only spend about 24 hours in South Korea, it is perhaps the most symbolic stop in his Asian tour, says the BBC’s Robin Brant in Seoul.

The trip is designed to bolster the military alliance that has long protected South Korea, and strength in unity is the message they want to send to North Korean leader Kim Jong-un just across the border, says our correspondent.

But the two leaders also have their differences. Mr Trump has previously accused Mr Moon’s government of trying to appease the North.

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He has also previously criticised the free trade agreement between the US and South Korea, and has made clear he wants to re-negotiate its terms.

In Seoul, many are hoping that Mr Trump will not repeat his strong rhetoric against North Korea, or make any off-the-cuff remarks about “fire and fury”, which many here regard as unnecessary and incendiary, says our correspondent.

Protests against Mr Trump, as well as counter-rallies welcoming him, have been held in Seoul and elsewhere.

In the meantime, Robert Mugabe has fired his powerful vice-president, clearing the way for his wife, Grace, to succeed him as leader of Zimbabwe.

The information minister, Simon Khaya Moyo, told reporters at a press conference in Harare on Monday that Emmerson Mnangagwa had been removed from his post.

Moyo said Mnangagwa, 75, a former intelligence chief, had exhibited disloyalty, disrespect and deceitfulness.

Tensions are rising in Zimbabwe amid a deteriorating economy and a vicious struggle to succeed Mugabe, who is 93 and visibly ailing after 37 years in power. The sacking of Mnangagwa appears to settle that contest in favour of Mugabe’s wife, who is 52.

The first lady is far from a popular figure in Zimbabwe. Her image has suffered after an alleged assault on a model she found in the company of her sons in a luxury apartment in Johannesburg, South Africa.

Granted diplomatic immunity after the incident, Grace Mugabe was allowed to leave South Africa despite a police inquiry. She denies any wrongdoing.

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Reports of extravagant purchases, including property in South Africa and a Rolls-Royce, have also angered many in Zimbabwe, where an economic crisis has deepened.

Until recently, Mnangagwa was tipped as Mugabe’s likely successor, partly because of his support within the country’s powerful security establishment and among veterans of Zimbabwe’s 1970s guerilla war.

Despite his alleged involvement in atrocities in the 1980s, Mnangagwa was also the preferred candidate of much of the international community, where he was seen as most likely to guarantee a stable transition and implement economic reforms.

The feud between Mnangagwa and Grace Mugabe has been bitter and public. Last month the first lady, who leads the women’s league of the ruling Zanu-PF party, publicly denied she was behind the attempted poisoning of her rival in remarks broadcast on state TV.

Mnangagwa claimed he had been poisoned when he fell ill at a rally in August and had to be airlifted to hospital in South Africa. The veteran official has seen his own political stock plummet after accusations from party rivals that he was plotting to get Mugabe to step down in his favour. He denies the accusation.

On Saturday, Grace Mugabe cranked up the pressure against Mnangagwa, calling him the “root cause of factionalism” that was gnawing at Zanu-PF. She also accused the vice-president’s supporters of booing her while she gave her speech.

“What if I get in [as vice-president]? What’s wrong with that? Am I not in the party? If people know that I work hard and they want to work with me, what is wrong with that?” the first lady said.

A visibly angry Mugabe told the same rally that he and his wife were tired of constant insults from people who identified themselves as Mnangagwa supporters.

Fears of the return of 2008’s hyperinflation have led to panic-buying and rocketing prices in Zimbabwe, while confidence in the parallel “bond note” currency, launched by the government nearly a year ago, has collapsed.

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The fractured opposition, meanwhile, has been unable to channel national discontent into a strong play for power. The main opposition leader, Morgan Tsvangirai, has health problems and recently received treatment in South Africa.

Mnangagwa was appointed vice-president in 2014, taking over from Joice Mujuru, who was axed after Grace Mugabe launched a campaign accusing her of plotting to topple the president.

BBC with additional report from Guardian

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Vietnam Needs Over $13bn For Seaport Development By 2030

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Vietnam Needs Over $13bn For Seaport Development By 2030

Vietnam will require more than 359 trillion Vietnamese dong (around 13.6 billion U.S. dollars) to develop its seaport system by 2030.

This is according to the latest plan issued by the Ministry of Construction.

Under the plan, public maritime infrastructure will need about 72.8 trillion dong (2.7 billion dollars), while ports providing cargo handling services will require some 286.7 trillion dong (around 10.9 billion dollars).

Vietnam News Agency reported on Monday.

The total land demand for seaports nationwide by 2030 is projected at around 34,000 hectares.

It included 17,500 hectares for seaports and the remainder for industrial parks and logistics facilities linked to ports, the report said.

_Xinhua

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4 Migrants Killed off Türkiye’s Izmir, Others Reported Missing

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4 Migrants Killed off Türkiye’s Izmir, Others Reported Missing

Four undocumented migrants were killed and two others rescued on Monday, with more reported missing, after an incident in the Aegean Sea off Türkiye’s western Izmir province, they said.

The Coast Guard Command said on its website that at 2:04 a.m. local time (2304 GMT Sunday).

It received information that migrants had gone overboard from a rubber boat off the coast of the Karaburun district and needed assistance.

“Rescue units dispatched to the area saved two migrants alive and recovered the bodies of four others,” the statement noted.

The survivors informed authorities that additional migrants were still unaccounted for, prompting continued search and rescue operations at sea.

The total number of migrants on the boat and their intended destination were not immediately disclosed.

The Aegean Sea has long served as a major route for migrants seeking to reach Europe through Türkiye.

Türkiye, one of the world’s leading host countries for refugees, currently shelters around four million migrants, the majority of them Syrians, according to the Presidential Directorate of Communications. 

_Xinhua

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Trump Pushes for The Largest Mass Deportation Drive Amidst Protests

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U.S. President Donald Trump has escalated his tough stance on immigration, demanding a sweeping expansion of arrests and deportations by federal agents with the Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

In a post on his Truth Social platform on Monday, the Republican president called on ICE and other agencies to do all in their power to carry out what he described as the single largest Mass Deportation Programme in History.

Trump specifically targeted Democrat-led cities, including Los Angeles, Chicago and New York, urging the federal agents to step up enforcement efforts.

The president’s hard-line approach has sparked widespread protests across several U.S. cities.

Demonstrations in the U.S intensified recently after Trump deployed National Guard troops and marines to Los Angeles, a move strongly opposed by California Governor Gavin Newsom, a prominent Democrat and potential 2028 presidential contender.

Mass deportations were a central promise during Trump’s election campaign, and since taking office, his administration has staged raids accompanied by press releases, photographs and regular updates on deportations to showcase their efforts.

An estimated 11 million people currently live in the U.S. without valid papers.

Many work in sectors vital to the economy, such as agriculture, construction and hospitality.

Against this backdrop, Trump has recently made a notable adjustment.

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Earlier on Thursday, he suggested exempting the agriculture and hotel industries from the immigration crackdown.

“Our great Farmers and people in the Hotel and Leisure business have been stating that our very aggressive policy on immigration is taking very good, long-time workers away from them, with those jobs being almost impossible to replace,” Trump wrote on Truth Social.

The New York Times reported, citing government officials, that the change came after Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins called Trump and told him of growing concern among farm owners.

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