Author Topic: Who will succeed Kim Jong Il?  (Read 625 times)

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Offline bijou

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Who will succeed Kim Jong Il?
« on: September 14, 2008, 03:12:29 AM »
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The North Korean leader Kim Jong Il may now be able to brush his own teeth after an apparent stroke but talk in Asia is turning to the odd cast of characters who may succeed him.

The inner workings of the Kim dynasty have always seemed a cross between Shakespeare and The Sopranos.

Wives, concubines, blood brothers and old comrades rise and fall in a confusing and almost completely opaque sequence of dramas.

One son is a confirmed gambler, another is rumoured to be effeminate and practically nothing is known about the third.

At events such as last week’s 60th anniversary parade, the public sees the wooden ranks of generals in the Korean People’s Army, wearing those outsize braided caps, alongside bureaucrats in dark suits with hair dyed jet-black. Outsiders peering in to the Hermit Kingdom are becoming convinced that these men will form some sort of authoritarian collective leadership to replace the ‘Dear Leader’ when he goes.

... Kim Jong Il relies most heavily on his eldest son” claimed Pyon Jin Il, editor of the Korea Report, a magazine based in Japan.

“He is eventually likely to be named the successor after running the state jointly with other leaders,” he told the Nikkan Gendai evening paper.

Kim Yong Nam, 38, the son in question, is well-known to Japanese newspaper readers.

In 2001 he was detained at Tokyo airport while trying to enter the country on a forged Dominican passport in the name of Pang Xiong.

He sported a diamond-encrusted Rolex watch and was accompanied by a female companion, a small child and a nanny.

After telling immigration officers that he wished to visit Disneyland, he was put on a plane back to the People’s Republic of China, there being no direct flights to North Korea.

... There is a different set of presentational issues over the other contender.

He is Kim Jong Chol, a slender young man now aged about 27 who was last heard of working in the agitation and propaganda department of the Korea Workers Party – the same job that started his father’s ascent.

Jong Chol went to school in Berne, Switzerland, where he was met every day by his supposed parents, employees of the North Korean embassy, who aroused some curiosity by bowing to him deeply.

In his favour is the fact that Kim adored his mother, the dancer Ko Young Hee, who became the ‘Dear Leader’s’ consort and bore him two sons before she died of cancer in Paris in 2003.

Against him, however, is the evidence of none other than Kim Jong Il’s personal Japanese sushi chef, who told television viewers on his return home that the North Korean leader thought Jong Chol “too girlish.”

Kim preferred the scowling, aggressive demeanour of the younger brother Jong Un, the chef claimed.

...
http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/asia/article4740703.ece
« Last Edit: September 14, 2008, 08:39:29 AM by bijou »



Offline formerlurker

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Re: Who will succeed Kim Jong Il?
« Reply #1 on: September 14, 2008, 06:23:08 AM »
China will make that decision. 

Offline Airwolf

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Re: Who will succeed Kim Jong Il?
« Reply #2 on: September 16, 2008, 02:11:47 PM »
Thier hair dyed black? Who the hell wrote that shit? Koreans all have dark hair and alot of them for whatever reason keep it long into old age. I hardly doubt that the entire makeup of the Norths politicians all have to dye their hair.
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