North Korea: Kim Jong-un in ‘fragile’ condition after heart surgery – reports
South Korean officials say they are looking into reports but are yet to see any ‘unusual signs’ regarding Kim’s health
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The South Korean government says it is investigating reports that North Korea’s Kim Jong-un is in a “fragile” condition after undergoing an unspecified surgical operation.
Officials from the South Korean intelligence services said they were looking into a CNN report that said the North’s leader was “in grave danger”, citing unnamed US intelligence sources.
An earlier report by Seoul-based news outlet Daily NK said Mr Kim was staying at a countryside villa outside Pyongyang while he recovered from heart surgery, and that his condition was improving.
The South’s Unification Ministry, which handles affairs relating to North Korea, said it could not confirm either report but was investigating the matter.
However, a government source said that South Korea was yet to see any “unusual signs” coming from the North regarding Mr Kim’s health condition.
They added that the North’s leader appeared to be handling state affairs as usual and that it had no information about rumours regarding his health.
According to the North’s official news agency, the ruler presided over a meeting on 11 April, in which he discussed coronavirus prevention.
Kang Min-seok, a spokesperson for South Korea’s presidential Blue House, told reporters: “We have no information to confirm regarding rumours about Chairman Kim Jong Un’s health issue that have been reported by some media outlets. Also, no unusual developments have been detected inside North Korea.”
And the Reuters news agency quoted a Chinese intelligence source as saying he did not believe Mr Kim was critically ill. Neither Chinese nor South Korean officials denied reports Mr Kim had undergone surgery, however.
Speculation about the state of Mr Kim’s health has grown since he was conspicuously absent from events on 15 April commemorating the birth of his grandfather Kim Il-sung, the founder of the nation.
The date is a national holiday and one of the most important in the North Korean calendar. Dozens of top officials attended a flamboyant military parade at the Kumsusan Palace of the Sun, Kim Il-sung’s mausoleum, but Mr Kim was nowhere to be seen.
It is notoriously difficult to glean information about the closed-off country or its dictatorial leader other than what little is proclaimed by the North’s state media.
Mr Kim’s movements were last reported in KCNA, the country’s official news agency, on 11 April, when he chaired a meeting of the ruling party’s politburo.
His absence from the 15 April events led to speculation at the time that he might be attempting to distance his own rule from the legacy of his grandfather – or perhaps that he had been struck down with coronavirus. North Korea has officially declared zero Covid-19 cases, a claim met with scepticism by experts.
It is not the first time Mr Kim’s health has been a matter of speculation. In 2014, he disappeared from the public eye for more than a month – and then was pictured using a cane on his return. South Korea’s spy agency said he had undergone an operation to remove a cyst from his foot.
Duyeon Kim, a North Korea expert at Crisis Group, noted that Mr Kim wasn’t the first North Korean leader to be subject to such reports. “We’ve been here with his father and grandfather and were wrong too many times before,” she said. “It’s easy to speculate.”
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