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Report says North Korean diplomats told to prepare for important message
Posted: 18 October 2008 1156 hrs

 
 
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TOKYO - North Korea has ordered its diplomats overseas to get ready for an "important announcement" that may be related to the health of its reclusive leader Kim Jong-Il, a Japanese newspaper said Saturday.

Pyongyang has told diplomats around the world to stay in one place and refrain from travelling, the Yomiuri Shimbun reported, quoting several unnamed sources familiar with North Korean issues.

The sources speculated the message could be related to North Korea's relations with South Korea or the health of Kim, Japan's best-selling daily said, adding that the announcement was expected in a few days.

Reports of Kim's illness surfaced after he failed to appear at the country's 60th anniversary parade on September 9. South Korean officials have said he underwent brain surgery following a stroke around mid-August.

"We've heard the news. We are checking it," a spokesman for South Korea's National Intelligence Service said. He declined to say whether the spy agency has learned of the news from Yomiuri or from a different source.

North Korean state television a week ago aired photographs of Kim inspecting a women's artillery base, although a US official doubted that the images were recent. Some reports said Kim suffered partial paralysis.

The Japanese report came as South Korea's defence minister said he believed Kim remained in control of the government despite the reports of ill health but that the situation in the isolated country is unpredictable.

"Kim Jong-Il has not been seen in public for a while now, but both Korean and United States intelligence services estimate that he still has control over his administration," minister Lee Sang-hee told reporters in Washington.

- AFP/ir

 

 



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