KIM JONG UN’S SISTER SLAMS ‘IDIOT’ S. KOREAN PRESIDENT
SEOUL—The powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has described South Korea’s president and government as “idiots” and a “faithful dog” of the United States, state media reported Thursday.
Kim Yo Jong’s vitriol follows Seoul this week saying it was considering fresh unilateral sanctions on the North over recent missile tests, including an intercontinental ballistic missile launch last week.
“This disgusting act shows more clearly that the south Korean group is a ‘faithful dog’ and stooge of the US,” Kim said in a statement carried by the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA).
“I wonder what ‘sanctions’ the south Korean group, no more than a running wild dog on a bone given by the US, impudently impose on the DPRK,” she said, using the acronym of the North’s official name. “What a spectacle sight!”
Sign of disrespect
Pyongyang always refers to South Korea with a lowercase “s,” an apparent sign of disrespect.
Kim accused South Korean President Yoon Suk-yeol of creating a “dangerous situation” and compared him unfavorably to his more dovish predecessor Moon Jae-in, under whom, she said, Seoul “had not been our target.”
“I wonder why the south Korean people still remain a passive onlooker to such acts of the ‘government’ of Yoon Suk Yeol and other idiots,” she said.
Prelude to provocation
North Korea tends to issue statements before carrying out a provocation, professor Yang Moojin of the University of North Korean Studies in Seoul said, adding: “There may be an armed demonstration against South Korea and the United States soon.”
Friday’s ICBM launch was the latest in a record-breaking blitz of recent Pyongyang launches, and officials and analysts in Seoul and Washington have warned they could culminate in a seventh nuclear test.
North Korea has a long history of colorful personal attacks against foreign leaders, and analysts have often noted the country’s failure to use “diplomatic language.”
“Basically, they can’t speak well of the countries they consider enemies,” said Go Myonghyun, a researcher at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies.