The Sunday Guardian

North Korea’s anti-smoking drive falters as Kim keeps puffing

In a public campiagn to lower high rate of smokers, Kim was seen without cigarettes for about 80 days, but last week he again was spotted smoking.

- REUTERS AGENCIES

SEOUL: A North Korean anti-smoking campaign has apparently failed to persuade young leader Kim Jong-Un to quit, despite his late father’s warning that “a cigarette is like a gun aiming at your heart.”

During a public campaign to lower the country’s high rate of smoking, Kim was seen without a cigarette for more than 80 days, sparking speculatio­n that he may have kicked the habit.

But a photo in the North’s top newspaper, the Rodong Sinmun, last week of Kim smiling and holding a burning cigarette while visiting a children’s camp in Pyongyang seems to have dampened such expectatio­ns.

There have been plenty of photos of Kim lighting up in the past. He smoked when he inspected a ballistic missile plant, visited constructi­on sites, toured a hospital and attended various sports competitio­ns and art performanc­es.

He puffed away on an undergroun­d train and even in front of his pregnant wife.

The North’s state media have been hailing Pyongyang’s hectic anti-smoking campaign, which has been staged nationwide over the past month. Korean Central TV recently aired a documentar­y series focusing on health risks from smoking, with one female interviewe­e saying: “People who smoke first thing in the morning are disgusting and harmful to others.”

Kim’s father Kim Jong-Il and grandfathe­r Kim Il-Sung were also heavy smokers. Both died of heart attacks.

“A cigarette is like a gun aimed at your heart”, Kim Jong-Il said in early 2000, when he appeared to have kicked the habit. But he lapsed in 2008 and died three years later.

 ??  ?? Kim’s photo with a cigarette was published in a newspaper.
Kim’s photo with a cigarette was published in a newspaper.

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