US envoy to South Korea shaves off controversial moustache

Ambassador Harry Harris' 'colonial' facial hair became the object of unusual criticism amid uneasy relations between Washington and Seoul

(COMBO) This combination of images shows a file photo (L) taken on January 16, 2020 of US Ambassador to South Korea Harry Harris after a group interview at the ambassador's residence in Seoul; and a handout of a screen grab (R) from video received by the US Embassy Seoul on July 27, 2020 of ambassador Harris after having his moustache shaved at a barbershop in Seoul. It was reported on July 27, 2020 that most controversial moustache in South Korea has fallen victim to the razor's blade, with US ambassador Harry Harris visiting a traditional barbershop months after his facial hair became the object of unusual criticism. - -----EDITORS NOTE --- RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / US Embassy Seoul" - NO MARKETING - NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS
 / AFP / US Embassy Seoul / Handout / -----EDITORS NOTE --- RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT "AFP PHOTO / US Embassy Seoul" - NO MARKETING - NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS - DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS
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The most controversial moustache in South Korea has fallen victim to the razor's blade after US ambassador Harry Harris visited a barbershop months after his facial hair became the object of unusual criticism.

Seoul and Washington are security allies and the US stations 28,500 troops in the country.

But their relationship has been strained in recent years by differences in their approaches to North Korea and over cost-sharing responsibilities.

Mr Harris has several times been the object of controversy in the South, and accused of high-handedness. Even his facial hair became an issue of debate.

The envoy's mother was Japanese and, with Koreans still bitterly resentful of Tokyo's 1910-45 colonisation of the peninsula, commentators claimed the moustache alluded to the fashions of imperial governors-general from the period.

In January, Mr Harris retorted that his grooming was a matter of personal choice, and that his critics were "cherry picking history".

But over the weekend he uploaded a video to social media of him getting the moustache shaved off at a Korean barbershop, saying he did so to keep cool in the Seoul summer, while wearing a mask to fight the coronavirus pandemic.

"Glad I did this," the envoy said in a tweet.

"For me it was either keep the 'stache or lose the mask. Summer in Seoul is way too hot & humid for both. #COVID guidelines matter & I'm a masked man!"

Seoul and Tokyo are both major US allies, democracies and market economies faced with an overbearing China and nuclear-armed North Korea, but are locked in bitter disputes over historical issues.

Earlier this year Mr Harris said: "I understand the historical animosity that exists between both of the countries but I'm not the Japanese-American ambassador in Korea, I'm the American ambassador to Korea.

"And to take that history and put it on me simply because an accident of birth I think is a mistake."

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