Culture North Korea's Kim Jong Un appears in public amid health rumours


North Korean leader Kim Jong Un made his first public appearance in 20 days as he celebrated the completion of a fertilizer factory near Pyongyang, state media said Saturday, ending an absence that had triggered global rumours that he may be seriously ill.

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The North's official Korean Central News Agency reported that Kim attended the ceremony Friday in Sunchon with other senior officials, including his sister Kim Yo Jong, who many analysts predict would take over if her brother is suddenly unable to rule.

The official Rodong Sinmun newspaper published several photos of Kim wearing black and smiling as he looked around the factory and cut a red ribbon, his sister looking from behind. Seemingly thousands of workers, many of them masked, stood in lines at the massive complex, releasing balloons into the air.

It was Kim's first public appearance since April 11, when he presided over a ruling Workers' Party meeting to discuss the coronavirus and reappoint his sister as an alternate member of the powerful decision-making Political Bureau of the party's Central Committee. That move confirmed her substantial role in the government.

Speculation about his health swirled after he missed the April 15 birthday celebration for his late grandfather Kim Il Sung, the country's most important holiday, for the first time since taking power in 2011.

The possibility of high-level instability raised troubling questions about the future of the secretive, nuclear-armed state that has been steadily building an arsenal meant to threaten the U.S. mainland while diplomacy between Kim and President Donald Trump has stalled.

Some experts say South Korea, as well as its regional neighbours and ally Washington, must begin preparing for the possible chaos that could come if Kim is sidelined by health problems or even dies. Worst-case scenarios include North Korean refugees flooding South Korea or China or military hard-liners letting loose nuclear weapons.

Following an unusually provocative run in missile and nuclear tests in 2017, Kim used the Winter Olympics in South Korea to initiate negotiations with Washington and Seoul in 2018. That led to a surprising series of summits, including three between Kim and Trump.

But negotiations have faltered in past months over disagreements in exchanging sanctions relief and disarmament steps, which raised doubts about whether Kim would ever fully deal away an arsenal he likely sees as his strongest guarantee of survival.

Kim entered 2020 vowing to build up his nuclear stockpile and defeat sanctions through economic "self-reliance." Some experts say the North's self-imposed lockdown amid the coronavirus crisis could potentially hamper his ability to mobilize people for labour.

The KCNA said workers at the fertilizer factory broke into "thunderous cheers" for Kim, who it said is guiding the nation in a struggle to build a self-reliant economy in the face of "head wind" by "hostile forces."

The report didn't mention any direct comment toward Washington or Seoul.

Speaking to reporters at the White House, Trump declined to comment about Kim's reappearance but said he would "have something to say about it at the appropriate time."

State media reported Kim was carrying out routine activities outside public view, such as sending greetings to the leaders of Syria, Cuba and South Africa and expressing gratitude to workers building tourist facilities in the coastal town of Wonsan, where some speculated he was staying.

South Korea's government, which has a mixed record of tracking Pyongyang's ruling elite, repeatedly downplayed speculation that Kim, believed to be 36, was in poor health following surgery.

The office of President Moon Jae-in said it detected no unusual signs in North Korea or any emergency reaction by its ruling party, military and cabinet. Seoul said it believed Kim was still managing state affairs but staying at an unspecified location outside Pyongyang.

It wasn't immediately clear what caused Kim's absence in past weeks. In 2014, Kim vanished from the public eye for nearly six weeks and then reappeared with a cane. South Korea's spy agency said he had a cyst removed from his ankle.

Analysts say his health could become an increasing factor in years ahead: he's overweight, smokes and drinks, and has a family history of heart issues.

If he's suddenly unable to rule, some analysts said his sister would be installed as leader to continue Pyongyang's heredity dynasty that began after World War II.

But others question whether core members of North Korea's elite, mostly men in their 60s or 70s, would find it hard to accept a young and untested female leader who lacks military credentials. Some predict a collective leadership or violent power struggles.


Outside governments and media for years have struggled with information on Pyongyang's secretive ruling elite.

South Korean newspapers in 1986 reported that Kim's grandfather died after a Seoul military official said North Korea announced the demise of its founder over loudspeakers at the mine-strewn border between the rival nations. But hours later, Kim Il Sung appeared at Pyongyang's airport to greet a Mongolian delegation.

Kim Jong Un's father, Kim Jong Il, also was the subject of countless reports and rumours about his death. When it happened in December 2011, following years of deteriorating health and diminishing public appearances, the outside world had no clue until the North's state media announced it two days later.
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Maybe people will finally learn that western media is incredibly inaccurate on North Korea, there's so many countless fake or misinformed stories through the years.
Fly true, Rocket Man.
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TMZ had a major roll in spreading the story about his death.
Do you actually think western journalists have no responsibility to vet the stories they report? Weird cope.

"Cope". :story:
There's a lot more to this than "western media". You can blame the "western media" all you like, I wouldn't go believing DPRK spin so easily. DPRK are also saying they didn't have a case of Coronavirus either.

Remember, China actually sent a team of medics to NK not yet a week ago. That's not a "western media" source, that's a South Korean one.
 
When your country closes itself off from the outside world and actively suppresses any media that doesn't outright praise the leadership as infallible proxy-deities, misinformation abounds.
Ok so because NK is closed off and their news sucks western journalists should forward half assed rumors that even South Korea denies? That sounds very ethical and well reasoned.
"Cope". :story:
There's a lot more to this than "western media". You can blame the "western media" all you like, I wouldn't go believing DPRK spin so easily. DPRK are also saying they didn't have a case of Coronavirus either.

Remember, China actually sent a team of medics to NK not yet a week ago. That's not a "western media" source, that's a South Korean one.
I forgot how groundless rumors are really worth reporting on. You're bitching about north korean media when western media just misreported news, even if it originated elsewhere. Maybe just don't trust the media?

Yes China sends lots of delegations, doctors and support to North Korea, they're close partners not sure if you know that. It's funny how you try to misinterpret news to confirm your conspiracy. Are you actually saying it's strange during corona that China would send medics to North Korea?
 
That sound you hear is the sound of a million erections deflating, disappointed their waifu is not going to be a dictator anytime soon.

Also, inb4 claims that this appearance is a doppelganger.

I mean, it's a couple of still photos with nothing to place when they occurred, in a nondescript location in a country almost nobody looking at the photo has ever seen.

I don't think it requires a doppelganger to figure out a way to pull that one off. Obviously, the NK government is renowned for their integrity and forthrightness, so I'm giving them the benefit of the doubt, but it isn't like this photo is really the most solid of proof.
 
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