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 North Korea 
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Post North Korea
There's a sense of something big happening there.

Yesterday the NY Times reported that diplomats and news agencies operating in Pyongyang noticed the removal of some Kim Jong Il portraits.

Then comes this blog posting: http://powerlineblog.com/archives/008652.php

Apparently some group has been distributing anti-regime flyers in North Korea, and that is also unprecedented.

Here's to hoping.


Thu Nov 18, 2004 10:37 am
Extraordinary

Joined: Sun Oct 17, 2004 10:19 pm
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http://edition.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/asiap ... index.html

Mystery as Kim title, posters go
Officials have removed portraits from some public buildings
Thursday, November 18, 2004 Posted: 0532 GMT (1332 HKT)


SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- Officials in North Korea have removed portraits of ruler Kim Jong Il from some public buildings, and its state-run media reportedly have dropped his honorific title "Dear Leader" in a dramatic curtailment of his personality cult.

But analysts speculated Thursday that Kim may have ordered the steps himself, and that they don't necessarily reflect an overhaul in the reclusive nation's leadership.

Some experts believe Kim is playing down the official adulation to remove himself as a target for public discontent in his impoverished country, which has clung to totalitarian rule for more than half a century.

Kim also has made erratic efforts to modernize North Korea's antiquated economy, and the changes could be part of a similar, if extremely limited, campaign in the political arena.

Foreign diplomats reported the removal of portraits of Kim this week, an unusual development because the dictator is the focus of an all-encompassing cult of personality that he inherited from his father and late national founder, Kim Il Sung.

Then Tokyo-based Radiopress, which monitors North Korean media, said the communist regime had toned down the titles it bestows on Kim, who is locked in a dispute with the United States and its allies over Pyongyang's development of nuclear weapons.

Radiopress said the North's Korean Central News Agency and the Korean Central Broadcast referred to Kim not as "Dear Leader," but as "general secretary of the Worker's Party of Korea," or "chairman of the DPRK National Defense Commission and supreme commander of the Korean People's Army."

"We believe the change was made at his will to soften his image as a leader of a personality cult, although it is hard to determine what his real intentions are," said Radiopress editor Shinya Kato.

"But we do not believe it was a sign of coup or related to his loss of power."

North Korea is one of the most tightly controlled countries in the world, and defectors who have fled hunger and oppression there have spoken of systematic human rights abuses.

Still, Kim Jong Il has made periodic efforts to reach out to other countries, holding a 2000 summit with South Korea, visiting China and Russia and taking small steps toward reform of his devastated economy.

"Many North Korean defectors who fled the country recently are saying now it's quite easy to spot North Koreans criticizing their regime and Kim Jong Il in public," said Baek Seung Joo, chief of North Korean studies at the Korea Institute for Defense Analyses in Seoul.

"So these recent incidents surrounding his title and portraits in the official buildings may be an indication that Kim Jong Il is aware of the criticism toward his regime and is lowering the level of personality cult around him in order to appease the public sentiment," Baek said.



more at the link.


Thu Nov 18, 2004 11:03 am
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Extraordinary
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neo_wolf wrote:
http://edition.cnn.com/2004/WORLD/asiapcf/11/17/kim.cult.ap/index.html

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) -- Officials in North Korea have removed portraits of ruler Kim Jong Il from some public buildings, and its state-run media reportedly have dropped his honorific title "Dear Leader" in a dramatic curtailment of his personality cult...

Some experts believe Kim is playing down the official adulation to remove himself as a target for public discontent in his impoverished country, which has clung to totalitarian rule for more than half a century...

Then Tokyo-based Radiopress, which monitors North Korean media, said the communist regime had toned down the titles it bestows on Kim, who is locked in a dispute with the United States and its allies over Pyongyang's development of nuclear weapons...

"But we do not believe it was a sign of coup or related to his loss of power."



Keep hoping. It sounds purely like a strategic move to me. The officials work for him. If the title had read "Pissed off crowd storms building, rips royal portraits off walls" then I might think there was something else to it. This is too controlled. Most likely he's quickly backing off from the threats he made towards the U.S. because that was we can keep focusing on a geographical space far away from him.


Thu Nov 18, 2004 3:44 pm
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The point is, nobody knows what's up with Kim Jong Il. He hasn't been seen in a while.


Thu Nov 18, 2004 3:46 pm
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