Philippine Daily Inquirer

Kim daughter’s leadership hopes still dim in male-dominated NoKor

- EOUL—Although

Sthe unexpected appearance of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s daughter raised speculatio­n that she could be a successor in the making, analysts say it would be an unpreceden­ted uphill struggle in the male-dominated dynasty.

Each change at the top in North Korea has raised the prospect of a leadership vacuum or collapse of the Kim dynasty, which has ruled the country since its founding in 1948.

Kim Jong Un’s daughter— who was not named in state media—appeared in coverage of a ballistic missile launch on Saturday, watching the firing and holding her father’s hand as he examined the missile. This provided the first official confirmati­on that Kim has children, and underscore­d a message that the family is here to stay, analysts said.

They cautioned that it is far too early to tell whether she is a successor or simply a symbol used to assure citizens that nuclear weapons would protect children and be “monuments to be passed down to our descendant­s for generation­s,” as state media reported.

Chun Su-jin, the South Korean author of a book on North Korean women leaders, said the chance of North Korean elites welcoming Kim’s daughter as ruler is close to zero.

‘Just a show’

“It is not ready to welcome a leader of the other gender,” she said. “(Kim) is just staging a show that he is a loving father, not just a brutal dictator who shoots missiles.”

Others argue that despite North Korea’s deeply patriarcha­l society, gender may not disqualify a daughter or other woman from taking the reins.

Barring a sudden health problem that leads to his incapacita­tion or death, there is a fair amount of time before Kim, believed to be nearly 40, needs to consider a successor, said Michael Madden, director of North Korea Leadership Watch.

“That gives ample time for North Korea’s political culture to change and create the conditions for a female successor,” Madden said.

Kim has elevated several powerful women around him, including his sister, Yo Jong, and Choe Son Hui, the country’s first woman foreign minister.

“Kim Jong Un belongs to a different generation than his grandfathe­r and his father, and in some ways, he appears more receptive to change than his forefather­s,” said Rachel Minyoung Lee of the 38 North research organizati­on.

Based on reports by former American basketball player Dennis

Rodman, who spent time with Kim’s family in 2013, the North Korean leader is believed to have at least one daughter who is about 12-13 years old, Madden said. Analysts believe Kim may have as many as three children.

If Kim has any sons, they could still have an advantage to continue the male-centric “Mt. Paektu bloodline,” Lee said, referring to a volcano on the Chinese border that plays a central role in the ruling party’s mythology.

Women have held senior roles in North Korea over the years, but Kim Jong Il passed over several older daughters and sons to anoint Kim Jong Un, despite speculatio­n at the time that his second daughter could be his successor, Madden noted.

Women in politics

The increased participat­ion of North Korean women in elite politics does not necessaril­y indicate change to the broader social or political systems, 38 North said in a 2020 report.

North Korea is deeply isolated from world geopolitic­s and is under UN sanctions for its weapons programs, which include nuclear bombs.

According to human rights activists, sexual and gender-based violence remains “endemic,” and COVID-19 border lockdowns and restrictio­ns on previously growing market economies have been particular­ly hard on the women, who made up much of that workforce.

“In North Korea, gender is still important to be a leader,” said Hyun In-ae, a North Korean defector who now works at

Ewha Institute of Unificatio­n Studies in Seoul.

When rumors and speculatio­n arose in 2020 about Kim Jong Un’s health, his sister was seen a possible placeholde­r to take over the family dynasty until one of Kim’s children was old enough.

Believed to be in her early 30s, Kim Yo Jong is the leader’s only close relative with a public role in politics, spearheadi­ng a new, tougher campaign to put pressure on South Korea and in some cases operating as a “de facto” second in command, according to South Korean intelligen­ce.

Based on previous leaders, any children will need education and on the job experience before they can be considered for supreme leadership, and in about 10 years we can expect her to have begun an official career, Madden said.

If, over the next decade, Kim’s daughter becomes closely associated with economic developmen­t and the missile and nuclear weapons programs, then the North Korean political and military apparatus could position her as the promising next generation of the Paektu line, said Darcie Draudt of Princeton School of Public and Internatio­nal Affairs.

“Bottom line: the bloodline, and military and economic developmen­t bona fides, matter more then gender in the fourth generation of the Kim Dynasty,” she said.

 ?? —PHOTOS BY REUTERS ?? GIRL POWER Kim Jong Un’s daughter—who was not named in state media—appeared in coverage of an interconti­nental ballistic missile launch on Nov. 19. This photo provided the first official confirmati­on that Kim has children, and underscore­d a message that the family is here to stay, analysts said.
—PHOTOS BY REUTERS GIRL POWER Kim Jong Un’s daughter—who was not named in state media—appeared in coverage of an interconti­nental ballistic missile launch on Nov. 19. This photo provided the first official confirmati­on that Kim has children, and underscore­d a message that the family is here to stay, analysts said.
 ?? ?? RULE BREAKER? While observers say the chance of North Korean’s elite welcoming a woman like Kim’s daughter as ruler is close to zero, there are others who argue that despite Pyongyang’s deeply patriarcha­l society, gender may not disqualify a daughter or other woman from taking the reins.
RULE BREAKER? While observers say the chance of North Korean’s elite welcoming a woman like Kim’s daughter as ruler is close to zero, there are others who argue that despite Pyongyang’s deeply patriarcha­l society, gender may not disqualify a daughter or other woman from taking the reins.
 ?? ?? FAMILY MAN Speculatio­ns already arose about who would succeed Kim after rumors about his failing health spread in 2020.
FAMILY MAN Speculatio­ns already arose about who would succeed Kim after rumors about his failing health spread in 2020.

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