The National - News

Living up to title of rogue state

Missile launches and possible assassinat­ion of his half brother – all within a matter of hours. Family loyalties nor internatio­nal condemnati­on seem to have much effect on the desire of the North Korean leader to do what he wants whenever the mood takes h

- Aidan Foster-Carter, Foreign Correspond­ent, writes foreign.desk@thenationa­l.ae

Rogue state. Too often the term is tendentiou­s: a label slapped on whomever the West dislikes. North Korea is different. The Democratic People’s Republic of Korea – the first three words are mendacious for this tyrannical oppressive regime – is a state like no other. The Kim regime, now on its third Kim, scorns internatio­nal law. Like his grandfathe­r and father before him, Kim Jongun does as he pleases and no one seems able to stop him. North Korea has reminded us twice in quick succession of its global menace. On Sunday – Saturday night in Florida, where president Donald Trump was hosting Japan’s premier Shinzo Abe – it successful­ly launched a new intermedia­te-range missile. With rare detail, Pyongyang media trumpeted the Pukguksong- 2’ s technical advances. It uses solid rather than liquid fuel, making it more stable and quicker to launch from just about anywhere.

The next day, the United Nations Security Council, for the umpteenth time, unanimousl­y condemned this flagrant breach of its past resolution­s. But by then Mr Kim had lashed out on quite another front. On Monday morning , his exiled older half-brother Kim Jong-nam had a poisoned cloth shoved in his face by two female assailants at Kuala Lumpur airport, as he was about to fly to Macau. He died on the way to hospital. Much about this murder is obscure so far but more light should soon be shed. Malaysia is to release the findings of the post mortem – which the North Korean embassy opposed. Yet the embassy looks set to get Jong- nam’s corpse, since no next of kin has come forward.

Three arrests have been made so far. They include the alleged attackers, whose passports present them as Vietnamese and Indonesian respective­ly. Both their testimonie­s will be crucial – assuming they talk. But if they are loyal North Korean agents, they may stay defiantly silent. Most people pesume Mr Kim is guilty until proven otherwise. That breaches natural justice, but stands to reason on two counts. First, he had motive and means. Second, North Korea and its leader have form.

The motive was to eliminate a critic and potential rival. In the past, although not recently, Jong-nam had criticised North Korea’s succession. He had also wished his half- brother, whom he never met, the best of luck. The feeling seems not to have been mutual. Jong- nam disavowed any interest in politics but it is widely suggested, albeit on no solid evidence, that China preferred this amiable, pro-reform number one son to his fierce, nuclear-obsessed younger sibling.

Despite Jong-nam’s non interest, Mr Kim – still uninvited to Beijing after five years in power – might have feared it could happen. Now that risk is gone.

But would North Korea really do that? The precedents are plentiful. In 2013, Mr Kim executed his uncle and mentor Jang Songthaek, whose power networks and links to China were seen as a threat.

North Koreans were told Jang was a traitor, corrupt and worse. That happened on home turf, but North Korea has no scruples about violating other nations’ sovereignt­y.

There have been three prior cases, mostly in South-East Asia in countries not unfriendly to Pyongyang. North Korea does not do respect, much less gratitude.

In the 1980s, the isolationi­st generals who ruled Myanmar saw North Korea as a kindred spirit. Yet in October 1983 a huge explosion at Yangon’s Martyrs’ Mausoleum targeted the visiting South Korean leader, Chun Doo-hwan.

Chun survived by arriving late, but 19 people died, including four South Korean ministers. Two of the three bombers, both North Korean military officers, were captured alive.

Pyongyang to this day brazenly denies any role in this atrocity.

Four years later, in 1987, a Korean Air flight carrying workers returning from Libya exploded over the Andaman Sea, killing 115.

Two North Korean agents, disguised as Japanese, were caught in Bahrain. They took poison but one survived. Kim Hyun-hee spilt many beans. Then there was Hong Sunkyung, a North Korean diplomat in Bangkok. In 1999, he and his family tried to defect. They were seized by colleagues and bundled into a van, which luckily overturned shortly before reaching the border with Laos.

After a tense stand- off , the family reached Seoul. Thailand was furious, yet it remains inexplicab­ly nice to North Korea, selling them rice which rarely gets paid for.

For that matter, a Malaysian university gave Mr Kim an honorary degree. Remarkably, Malaysia permits visa-free travel to and from North Korea. That must surely now end.

North Korea’s troublemak­ing is global.

In the Middle East, it co-operates closely with Iran on missile technology. Such an alliance between mullahs and atheist idolaters smacks of deep cynicism on both sides.

But so-called anti-imperialis­m always bred very strange bedfellows.

Botswana severed all ties with Pyongyang in 2014 after the UN turned the spotlight on North Korea’s human rights abuses. More nations should follow this lead.

Now in his sixth year in power, Kim Jong- un has yet to meet a single foreign leader or travel abroad.

If things stay that way, he might just begin to get the message.

Kim Jong-un is yet to meet a single foreign leader or travell abroad, even after being in power for more than five years

 ?? Reuters ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong-un takes part in celebratio­ns marking his dead father’s birthday despite death of the man’s other son.
Reuters North Korean leader Kim Jong-un takes part in celebratio­ns marking his dead father’s birthday despite death of the man’s other son.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates