Daily Star Sunday

IT’S KIM JONG-UN

(...and 2,3,4,5,6)

- ■ EXCLUSIVE by PATRICK WILLIAMS

BONKERS North Korean scientists are attempting to clone human beings, the Daily Star Sunday can reveal.

Dictator Kim Jong-Un wants to create an army of super soldiers who will obey his every command.

Genetic scientists have spent billions on a secret cloning programme started by Kim’s grandfathe­r more than

30 years ago.

Now intelligen­ce experts believe the 35-year-old tyrant wants to create perfect copies of both his father Kim Jong-il, grandfathe­r Kim II-Sung, the founder of the modern state, and other family members – which could include himself.

MI6 believes the secretive Communist state has already cloned cats, dogs and horses – and has been experiment­ing on human embryos for at least 10 years.

Senior spooks working alongside the US intelligen­ce agency the CIA have uncovered informatio­n suggesting human cloning has taken place at two secret laboratori­es.

One lab is based outside the North Korean capital Pyongyang and the other is thought to be on a Caribbean island.

A senior intelligen­ce official told the Daily Star Sunday that North Korean scientists have been conducting genetic experiment­s on humans for years.

The source said: “Prisoners have been used in cloning and other terrible experiment­s for years. Kim is obsessed with human cloning. He has been attempting to grow human tissue, organs and clone embryos. He believes he can live forever by making clones of himself.

“Human cloning is very advanced on the Korean peninsular. Both the North and the South have been experiment­ing for decades. What we don’t know is whether they have had any success.

“Kim Jong-Un is obsessed with the idea of recreating his grandfathe­r. He wants to bring him back to life to demonstrat­e to the people the enormity of his power.

“Human cloning is probably the only area of science where North Korea leads the world but it is very secret.

“Almost all of the intelligen­ce comes from people who worked in the labs and managed to defect. For all we know, they may have already achieved it.”

In theory, human cloning could produce an identical copy of a living person whose body parts could be used to replace organs such as heart, liver and kidneys.

There is no worldwide ban on human cloning although in at least 70 countries around the world, including the UK, it is illegal.

Both South and North Korea have a controvers­ial history with cloning. Laboratori­es in South Korea will clone family pets, such as dogs and cats for around £80,000.

A spokesman for the North Korean embassy refused to comment.

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