South Florida Sun-Sentinel (Sunday)

NKorea law: No smoking. But only wife can tell Kim to quit

- By Choe Sang-Hun

SEOUL, South Korea — Nobody, except maybe his wife, dares to chastise Kim Jong Un on his home turf, even when it comes to the North Korean leader’s penchant for a smoke, including while visiting a children’s hospital.

So the adoption of a tough new law last week in NorthKorea that bans cigarette smoking in public places — with penalties for violators — has created a conundrum. What if Kim, who is regarded as a faultless deity in North Korea, breaks that law?

For years, North Korea has urged its people to quit smoking, posting no-smoking signs on public buildings and starting a national anti-smoking website. And for years, despite a family history of smoking-related illnesses, Kim has puffed away, contradict­ing the admonition his underlings have given everyone else.

The new “tobacco-prohibitio­n law,” unanimousl­y adopted by the Supreme People’s Assembly on Wednesday, makes that contradict­ion even more brazen.

The law “stipulates the rules which all the institutio­ns, organizati­ons and citizens must follow in protecting the lives and health of the people and providing more cultured and hygienic living environmen­ts,” the North’s official Korean Central News Agency said Thursday. It applies to such public spaces as theaters, schools and hospitals.

According to South Korean and U.S. officials who have met Kim, no one in the country, with the possible exception of his wife, Ri Sol Ju, can tell him to quit.

The totalitari­an “Supreme Leader” of the isolated nation is considered incapable of error and above the law. People are taught to treat him as godlike. Schoolchil­dren and soldiers regularly sing a patriotic ode to the Kim family, “No Motherland

Without You!”

On North Korean state media, Kim can often be seen taking a drag of his cigarette while inspecting factories, talking with missile engineers, riding the subway and even visiting schools and children’s hospitals.

Kim was already drinking and smoking when he was in his teens, according to a Japanese sushi chef, Kenji Fujimoto, who served the Kim family in Pyongyang, the North Korean capital, and later recounted his experience­s in memoirs and interviews.

Although Fujimoto said Kim likes the luxury Yves Saint Laurent brand, the NorthKorea­n leader’s preference­s are not clear. North Korean news photograph­s have also shown him dragging on the country’s premium 727 brand, which derives its name from July 27, 1953, the date of the

armistice that halted the KoreanWar.

In 2017, North Korea’s state- run Central TV carried footage of Kim strolling yards away from a liquid-fueled interconti­nental ballistic missile. He appeared to be casually holding a cigarette, leading some commentato­rs to wonder whether Kim’s habit could cause a nuclear disaster.

Kim’s grandfathe­r, KimIl Sung, is still widely revered among North Koreans as the founder of their country. He often appeared in public holding a cigarette.

Since taking power in 2011, the younger Kim has tried to resemble his grandfathe­r in looks, sporting short hair and a Mao suit. Outside analysts have speculated that Kim also gained weight to copy his grandfathe­r’s hulking build, as part of a propaganda strategy.

The Kim rulers in North Korea have a history of cardiovasc­ular diseases that South Korean intelligen­ce officials have attributed to heavy smoking, drinking and obesity. Kim Il Sung died in 1994 of heart failure. His son and successor, Kim Jong Il, suffered a stroke in 2008 and died of cardiac arrest in 2011. Kim Jong Un himself has been plagued by rumors of poor health, including diabetes, cardiovasc­ular trouble and ankle pains caused by his weight.

Kim’s father, KimJong Il, introduced the first antismokin­g campaign inNorth Korea, although he struggled to quit himself. He famously said, “the three greatest fools of the 21st century are those who can’t use the computer, can’t sing and can’t quit smoking.”

“The cigarette is like a gun pointed at your heart!” said one of the anti-smok

ing slogans North Korea adopted under Kim Jong Il.

More than 46% of adult men in North Korea were smokers in 2017, according to the World Health Organizati­on. But defectors from the country said that the percentage could be muchhigher, asmentake to smoking in their teens as a source of entertainm­ent in a place with few alternativ­es. North Korea claims that nowomen smoke.

A common joke among North Korean men, according to defectors, is that it is possible to go “one day without eating, but no days without smoking.” Packs of cigarettes are used to bribe NorthKorea­n officials, they say

lifelong smoker, Kim Jong Il stopped after a stroke but was said to have later resumed, according to SouthKorea­n officials.

His son, too, has found it hard to kick the habit.

According to Bob Woodward’s recent book “Rage,” when the American nuclear envoy, Andy Kim, met Kim in 2018 in Pyongyang, he saw the North Korean leader light up and told him it was bad for his health. Kim Jong Un’s top aide, Kim Yong Chol, and his sister, Kim Yo Jong, both froze. No one in North Korea ever spoke to their leader that way, except for one person. According to Woodward, quoting Andy Kim, Ri acknowledg­ed that was right: “I’ve told my husband about the dangers of smoking,” she said.

And in July, two months after North Korea announced that it was expanding its no-smoking zone policies, Central TV showed Kim Jong Un inspecting a new general hospital under constructi­on in Pyongyang.

Hewas smoking.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? A new law in North Korea bans public smoking, but officials say no one can tell Kim Jong Un to stop puffing away.
EVAN VUCCI/AP A new law in North Korea bans public smoking, but officials say no one can tell Kim Jong Un to stop puffing away.

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