Dan,
Thanks a lot for your reply.
In fact, I ran
pm -e selinux-policy-targeted
rpm -e selinux-policy
And after reboot I got some message about freeze from systemd, I could
not login (tried twice), so I reinstalled Linux on this machine.
The question is: what do you mean by "If you disable SELinux".

Does that mean adding "selinux=0" on command line?
Or is it enough to set,  in /etc/selinux/config

SELINUX=disabled

(or maybe better is SELINUX=permissive, as Ali suggested ).
Regards,
Kevin
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