Kim Jong Il
Stroke rumours spread
The North Korean Leader was absent From nation's 60th Anniversary
celebration. CBS.
Sep 10, 2008
There was no sign of Kim Jong Il at a closely watched
parade yesterday marking the 60th anniversary of North
Korea's founding, and Western officials said the dictator
- who has not appeared publicly for a month - may be gravely
ill.
North Korea's state media was silent about his absence
from the parade, a relatively low-key ceremony that unexpectedly
lacked North Korea's trademark military display.
In a broadcast monitored in Seoul, Korean Central Television
showed North Korea's No 2 leader and other officials atop
a viewing stand. Kim Jong Il was not shown.
In
Washington, a Western intelligence official said there
is reason to believe the 66-year-old, known
to his people
as the "Dear Leader," was gravely ill after he
failed to show up at the celebration.
"There is reason to believe Kim Jong Il has suffered
a serious health setback, possibly a stroke," the
official said.
Another official said rumours and reports of a possible
illness were based in part on intelligence gathered by
other nations.
At
her White House briefing, press secretary Dana Perino
initially said she had no information on
Kim's health. "I
have nothing to give you today," she told journalists,
CBS News White House correspondent Mark Knoller reported.
A senior US official said rumours had been circulating
for weeks about Kim's health and his control over North
Korea's highly centralized government. That official said
the US has no independent confirmation that Kim is ill.
Japan's Kyodo news agency reported that Kim did not attend
and North Korea's state news agency has made no mention
of Kim appearing in public yesterday.
Kim's last appearance reported by North Korean media came
on Aug 14. South Korean media have reported in recent days
that he may be ill and receiving medical treatment, citing
government officials.
The South Korean government says it has been unable to
confirm them.
Kim's health has been a focus of intense interest because
his fate is believed to be closely tied to that of the
secretive totalitarian state that he inherited in 1994
from his father in communism's first hereditary transfer
of power.
Kim Jong Il took over the communist country after Kim
Il Sung died of heart failure - a death that was not announced
for 34 hours.
He has three sons with two different mothers but has not
anointed any of them as his successor.
A spokesman for South Korea's main spy agency, the National
Intelligence Service, said it could not immediately confirm
Kim's absence.
The rally involved about 1m people, the spokesman said,
on condition of anonymity, citing office policy.
The centerpiece of the celebration had been expected to
be a massive military parade through Pyongyang's central
Kim Il Sung Square - named after the communist country's
founding figure - as normally happens in key anniversary
years.
The footage broadcast on North Korean television showed
what it described as civilian militia goose-stepping through
the square.
Kim Jong Il attended the parade on the 50th and 55th anniversaries.
South Korean media have speculated that the 66-year-old
Kim's health has worsened. South Korea's intelligence service
has previously said Kim has chronic heart disease and diabetes
- denied by Kim himself.
South Korea's Chosun Ilbo newspaper reported Tuesday that
Kim collapsed on Aug. 22, citing an unnamed South Korean
diplomat in Beijing. The diplomat got the information from
a Chinese source, the paper said.
‘Died in 2003 – a
double used’
A Japanese scholar and expert on North Korea, Toshimitsu
Shigemura, a professor at Tokyo's Waseda University, has
even claimed recently that Kim actually died in 2003 and
that the North has been using body doubles of Kim for public
events.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Jiang Yu said at
a regular news briefing Tuesday that she had no information
about Kim's health and had not heard that he was ill.
She did not answer a question asking when the last time
was that Chinese officials spoke directly with Kim.
The North's 60th anniversary comes amid international
doubts over its commitment to denuclearization, speculation
about the health of its leader and a worsening food crisis.
North Korea's state news agency had made no mention of
the parade late Tuesday, though it carried an exhortation
from the main Rodong Sinmun newspaper calling on the population
to remain united around Kim.
It
also called for a stronger military, describing the armed
forces as "the foundation of
a strong nation."
South Korea said last week the North has begun restoring
its atomic facilities in apparent anger over not being
removed from a US list of countries that sponsor terrorism.
North Korea - which conducted an underground nuclear test
blast in October 2006 - began disabling its main nuclear
facilities late last year in exchange for international
energy aid and other benefits.
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2008/09/09/world/main4429531.shtml