Kuwait Times

Why North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s health matters

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SEOUL: Nearly three weeks after North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s no-show at a key event sparked rumors he was seriously ill or even dead, state media published photos Saturday showing him in public. Kim’s conspicuou­s absence from the April 15 celebratio­ns for the birthday of his grandfathe­r, the North’s founder, sparked feverish speculatio­n over his health and who would replace him at the helm of the nuclear-armed country.

It is not the first time Kim has disappeare­d from public view. In 2014, he dropped out of sight for nearly six weeks before reappearin­g with a cane. Days later, South Korea’s spy agency said he had undergone surgery to remove a cyst from his ankle. Here is a look at why Kim’s health has been the subject of so much conjecture.

Who is his successor?

Kim has been in power for nearly a decade and his death would have left Pyongyang facing an unplanned succession for the first time in its history. Leadership has always been a family affair in the isolated North, dominated by the members of the “Paektu bloodline”-a Northern term for the country’s founder Kim Il Sung and his descendant­s. Kim’s three known children are still very young and there is no designated successor as far as the world is aware. His younger sister Yo Jong-one of his closest advisers-is widely regarded as the top contender to succeed him but the North is a highly patriarcha­l society where seniority and gender both carry weight.

What happens to nuclear talks?

Kim is known in the North as the Supreme Leader and his authority spans the ruling Workers’ Party and the military. All major decisions require his approval. Kim’s disappeara­nce from public view came as Pyongyang’s talks with Washington over the North’s nuclear arsenal are at a standstill, despite three meetings between Kim and US President Donald Trump. If Kim were incapacita­ted or dead, it would have increased uncertaint­y over the process. Analysts also say it could have led to a chaotic power struggle and triggered an exodus of refugees into China-something the North’s diplomatic backer and main trading partner Beijing has long feared. “Kim’s personal profile, family history, and the structure of the North Korean regime make his health a major variable for the country’s stability and foreign policy,” Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul said. North Korea is an unusually opaque country, where even economic growth figures are treated as a state secret. Observers and even diplomats in Pyongyang rely heavily on the closely controlled state media for hints of what is going on. Secrecy is strictest of all around the leadership and the absence of informatio­n creates ample room for speculatio­n to flourish unchecked. Kim was last seen presiding over a ruling party meeting on April 11. But four days later he missed the celebratio­ns for the birthday of his grandfathe­r-the most important date in the North’s political calendar-sparking questions over his whereabout­s. Daily NK, a South Korea-based outlet run mostly by North Korean defectors, reported Kim had undergone a cardiovasc­ular procedure and was recovering at a villa in North Pyongan province.

 ?? — AFP ?? MEXICO CITY: Health workers of the La Raza Hospital demonstrat­e for the lack of medical material to care for COVID-9 patients, in Mexico City during the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.
— AFP MEXICO CITY: Health workers of the La Raza Hospital demonstrat­e for the lack of medical material to care for COVID-9 patients, in Mexico City during the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

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