Protesters surrounding a vote counting facility in Seoul with police securing ballot boxes
Protesters surrounding a vote counting facility in Seoul with police securing ballot boxes
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Protesters block Seoul vote counting site over ballot shortages

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Thousands of protesters surrounded a vote counting facility in eastern Seoul on Friday over ballot shortages that disrupted Wednesday's local elections, prompting police to disperse the crowd and secure ballot boxes.

Police confirmed around 2,000 demonstrators had encircled the handball stadium at Olympic Park by 5:40 p.m., blocking entrances and preventing officials from leaving. The crowd chanted

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Initial reactions on X include factual reports of police clearing protesters from a Seoul vote-counting site due to ballot shortages, alongside skeptical posts accusing authorities of suppressing votes in opposition areas and calls for re-elections with claims of police violence.

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South Korean voters at a polling station for local elections.
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Nation heads to polls to select local gov't chiefs, councilors

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South Koreans head to polling stations Wednesday to elect local government leaders and council members in the ninth nationwide local elections.

Protests over ballot shortages during local elections entered their second day in Seoul on Saturday, with thousands surrounding a vote-counting facility and demanding a new election.

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The head of South Korea's election watchdog offered to resign on June 5 after ballot shortages disrupted voting in parts of Seoul during this week's local elections.

South Korea's National Election Commission said Saturday that 513 candidates were elected without a vote ahead of the June 3 local elections.

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Official campaigning for South Korea's June 3 local elections and parliamentary by-elections started on Thursday, May 21, with nearly 7,830 candidates competing nationwide. The two-week period runs until June 2 and is seen as an early test for the Lee Jae Myung administration.

Candidate registration opened Thursday for South Korea's June 3 local elections and parliamentary by-elections, seen as a key test of public sentiment toward President Lee Jae Myung's first year in office.

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Hong Kong police stopped and searched five men and two women in Causeway Bay for allegedly disrupting order on Thursday evening.

 

 

 

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