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North Korea leader ‘missing’

North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un has apparently missed a key political event, extending a month-long absence that has fuelled rampant speculation about his physical and political health, although South Korea believes he remains in full control.

Kim was not listed by the state KCNA news agency as being among the officials who made an annual pilgrimage on Friday to the mausoleum in Pyongyang housing the remains of his father and grandfather.

However, a floral tribute bearing Kim’s name was presented to the two statues of Kim Jong-Il and Kim Il-Sung to mark the 69th anniversary of the North Korean ruling party’s foundation, the agency said.

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Kim, believed to be 30 or 31, has not been seen since September 3 when he attended a music concert with his wife in Pyongyang.

Competing theories for his disappearance range widely from an extended rest period to a leadership coup, via a long list of possible illnesses and ailments including broken ankles, gout and diabetes.

South Korea, which has largely distanced itself from the guessing game, said it saw no indication to suggest Kim was no longer in charge.

“There are continuous reports (in North Korea’s state media) concerning the exercise of Kim Jong-Un’s leadership,” Seoul’s Unification Ministry spokesman Lim Byeong-chul told reporters.

“Judging from these, it seems that Kim Jong-Un is ruling normally,” Lim said, adding that the government had no specific intelligence on Kim’s health.

Kim’s absence from the Kumsusan mausoleum visit was significant as he has attended each year since coming to power following the death of his father in 2011.

While he could still make an appearance later in the day, a complete no-show will likely send an already whirring rumour mill into overdrive.

The explanation with the most currency is a health issue that has left him temporarily incapacitated.

Kim, a heavy smoker, has shown striking weight gain since coming to power following the death of his father in 2011, and recent TV footage had shown him walking with a pronounced limp.

“My own feeling is that there has been a health problem, but not a particularly serious one,” said Chung Young-chul, a professor of North Korean studies at Sogang University in Seoul.

“A no-show would certainly force us to consider the possibility that it’s more serious than we thought,” Chung said.

In a front-page editorial on Friday, the Rodong Sinmun described Kim as the symbol of the ruling party’s “dignity and invincibility”, and said his authority should be protected by all means necessary.

What little light North Korea has deemed necessary to shed on the rumours surrounding Kim’s absence has only added to the confusion.

State media alluded at one point to his “discomfort”, but one member of a top-level North delegation that visited South Korea last week insisted Kim had no health problem at all.

Topics: North Korea
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