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South Korean spy agency claims Kim Jong-un had surgery | South Korean spy agency claims Kim Jong-un had surgery |
(about 2 hours later) | |
South Korea’s spy agency claims it has solved the mystery of the North Korean leader Kim Jong-un’s six-week public absence. | |
The National Intelligence Service (NIS) told legislators that a foreign doctor operated on Kim in September or October to remove a cyst from his right ankle, according to Park Byeong-seok, an aide for the opposition lawmaker Shin Kyung-min. | |
The aide said the agency also told legislators in a closed-door briefing that the cyst could recur because of Kim’s obesity, smoking and heavy public schedule. | The aide said the agency also told legislators in a closed-door briefing that the cyst could recur because of Kim’s obesity, smoking and heavy public schedule. |
After last being seen on state media on 3 September, Kim reappeared on 14 October hobbling with a cane, but smiling and looking thinner. | After last being seen on state media on 3 September, Kim reappeared on 14 October hobbling with a cane, but smiling and looking thinner. |
The speculation during his absence was particularly intense because of the Kim family’s importance to North Korea. The family has ruled the country since its founding in 1948. | The speculation during his absence was particularly intense because of the Kim family’s importance to North Korea. The family has ruled the country since its founding in 1948. |
It was not immediately clear how the information was obtained by the agency, which has a spotty track record of analysing developments in opaque North Korea. | |
The NIS also said North Korea has expanded five of its political prisoner camps, including the Yodok camp, which was relocated to the north-western city of Kilchu, according to Lim Dae-seong, an aide to the ruling party lawmaker Lee Cheol-woo, who also attended the briefing. It believes the camps hold about 100,000 prisoners, Lim said. | |
He said the agency also believed North Korea had recently used a firing squad to execute several people who had been close to Kim Jong-un’s uncle, Jang Song-thaek, who was considered the country’s second most powerful person before his sudden execution in December 2013. | |
In an intelligence success, the NIS correctly said that Jang had probably been dismissed from his posts before North Korea officially announced his arrest. | |
However, it received heavy criticism when its director acknowledged that it had ignored intelligence indicating North Korea’s impending shelling of a South Korean island in 2010. It also came under fire because of reports that it only learned of the 2011 death of the then leader Kim Jong-il, the father of Kim Jong-un, more than two days after it occurred. |
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