The Star Malaysia

N. Korea denies defections

Govt blasts South’s media reports as ‘Nazi-style propaganda’

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SEOUL: North Korea has responded angrily to reports in South Korean media on a recent spate of high-level defections and executions, calling them Nazi-style propaganda aimed at tarnishing Pyongyang’s image.

The reports in a number of publicatio­ns have been accompanie­d by speculatio­n that the defections signal a growing instabilit­y in the North Korean leadership under Kim Jong-un.

In a lengthy commentary yesterday, the North’s official KCNA news agency dismissed the reports as wild rumour and “sheer lies”.

“The false propaganda ... is a foolish and base politicall­y-motivated conspirato­rial farce” aimed at giving the impression of a mood of “uneasiness and horror” within the ranks of the North’s top officials, it said.

KCNA specifical­ly rubbished a report about the recent defection of a top-ranking general to the South.

Channel A – a subsidiary of the conservati­ve Dong-A Ilbo daily – reported last week that Lieutenant General Pak Sung-Won, a deputy chief of the General Staff of the North Korean army, had escaped to Seoul via Moscow.

KCNA said the report was “sheer nonsense” and that Pak was now commanding a constructi­on project at the Masikryong Ski Resort – a pet project of the supreme leader.

The commentary also took issue with the recent report of an execution – apparently that of two North Korean students for watching pornograph­y.

The South’s media had become so

Speaking at a forum in Seoul yesterday, South Korean Foreign Minister Yun Byung-se said Kim was overseeing a “reign of terror” that had prompted a number of North Koreans working overseas to defect.

“Some of them, of course, are coming to South Korea,” Yun was quoted as saying by Yonhap.

However, he also acknowledg­ed that some of the recent media reports about specific North Korean defections were incorrect. — AFP officially confirmed by South Korean authoritie­s.

However, the South’s National Intelligen­ce Service reported in May that the North’s defence minister Hyon Yong-chol had been purged and most likely executed for insubordin­ation and dozing off during a formal military rally.

According to the NIS, Kim has ordered the execution of more than 12 officials so far this year, apparently for questionin­g his authority. adept at telling lies that it “puts the Nazis into the shade,” it added.

South Korea broadcaste­r YTN recently reported the defection of three officials from Office 39, a secretive government division devoted to acquiring hard-currency funds for the regime.

Yonhap news agency also published a series of articles regarding the recent defection of around 10 middle- to high-ranking officials.

None of the reports have been

 ??  ?? Public tribute: North Koreans laying flower bouquets on an altar before the statues of late leaders Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il at Mansu Hill in Pyongyang for the 21st anniversar­y of Il-sung’s death. — AFP
Public tribute: North Koreans laying flower bouquets on an altar before the statues of late leaders Kim Il-sung and Kim Jong-il at Mansu Hill in Pyongyang for the 21st anniversar­y of Il-sung’s death. — AFP

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