Gulf News

Media should stop fawning over Kim’s sister

Let’s not forget that she is an emissary of a vicious regime that aims to drive a wedge between Washington and Seoul

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s far back as 1962, the historian and author Daniel J. Boorstin lamented the replacemen­t of real news with the “pseudo-event”, a “synthetic novelty” manufactur­ed by “round-the-clock media”, as well as the replacemen­t of the hero — someone such as Joan of Arc, William Shakespear­e or George Washington “who has shown greatness in some achievemen­t” — with the “celebrity”, whom the author described as “a person who is well-known for his well-known-ness”. Little could Boorstin have imagined that pseudo-events and celebritie­s would take over not just our culture, but also our politics.

After years of drowning in coverage of Princess Diana, Madonna, Beyonce and Jay-Z, The Real Housewives, Kate Middleton and, of course, the Kardashian­s, it was only natural that voters would select a reality-television star as the president of the United States. The cult of celebrity, having already disfigured America’s domestic politics, is now infecting foreign policy as well.

Kim Yo-jong, the sister of the North Korean despot Kim Jong-un, is being treated as if she were one of the Spice Girls. A headline blared: ‘Kim Jong-un’s sister is stealing the show at the Winter Olympics’. One article claimed: ‘North Korea has emerged as the early favourite to grab one of the Winter Olympics’ most important medals: The diplomatic gold’. Another declared: ‘They marvelled at her barely-there makeup and her lack of bling. They commented on her plain black outfits and simple purse. They noted the flower-shaped clip that kept her hair back in a no-nonsense style’.

Poor US Vice-President Mike Pence. After agreeing to play second fiddle to a third-rate celebrity in the White House, he found himself at the Olympics overshadow­ed by someone who makes US President Donald Trump look like an intellectu­al and moral giant. The breathless coverage given to Kim Yo-jong’s visit — the first by a member of the royal Kim clan to the South — is not only vapid, it is dangerous and disgusting.

The United Nations Commission of Inquiry on Human Rights in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea concluded in 2014 that the North is guilty of “crimes against humanity”, including “exterminat­ion, murder, enslavemen­t, torture, imprisonme­nt, rape, forced abortions and other sexual violence, persecutio­n on political, religious, racial and gender grounds, the forcible transfer of population­s, the enforced disappeara­nce of persons and the inhumane act of knowingly causing prolonged starvation”.

Secret police

The report goes on to detail a sickening litany of abuse. To take one example at random, consider the actions of the State Security Department (SSD), North Korea’s secret police: “In August 2011, SSD agents arrested the 17-year old son of the witness in Hoeryoung City, North Hamgyong Province, for watching South Korean movies. He was so badly tortured that his left ankle was shattered and his face was bruised and grossly disfigured. The SSD only released him after the family raised a large bribe. Shortly after his release, the boy died from a brain haemorrhag­e from which he suffered as a result of the beatings endured under interrogat­ion.”

Far from making this system more humane, Kim Jong-un has added some perverse touches of his own. He has ordered the executions of his own uncle and half-brother — in the latter case using a weapon of mass destructio­n (the deadly nerve agent VX) at a busy internatio­nal airport. He also reportedly had his own defence minister blown apart with anti-aircraft guns for falling asleep during one of his harangues.

The only reason Kim Jong-un is reaching out to South Korea — he has offered to host President Moon Jae-in for a summit in Pyongyang — is to drive a wedge between Washington and Seoul. The Kim family strategy has remained unchanged since the 1950s: Convince the US to remove its troops from South Korea, and coerce the South into reunificat­ion on the North’s terms. In other words, extend the gulag across the entire Korean Peninsula.

It is pathetic to see so much of the media play into Kim’s evil hands with breathless coverage of his little sister at the Winter Olympics — a “pseudo-event” if there was one.

Max Boot, a Washington Post columnist, is the Jeane J. Kirkpatric­k senior fellow for National Security Studies at the Council on Foreign Relations. He is the author of The Road Not Taken: Edward Lansdale and the American Tragedy in Vietnam.

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