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Politics

Kim Jong Un 'did not undergo surgery' — South Korea

May 3, 2020

Hours after the two Koreas exchanged gunfire, a South Korean official says he doesn't believe North Korea's chairman Kim Jong Un received surgery. Kim was absent from public life for three weeks.

https://p.dw.com/p/3bi2O
Kim Jong Un at the unveiling of a fertilizer plant in May
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/KCNA

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un did not undergo surgery during his three-week absence from public life, a South Korean news outlet reported on Sunday. News outlet Yonhap cited a senior government official, hours after the two Koreas exchanged gunfire at the border.

The South Korean official said speculative reports on whether the North Korean leader had undergone surgery were not true.

"There were media reports speculating about Kim's surgery, citing a change in the way he walks," the official said, saying Seoul had adequate information to draw the conclusion without giving more details.

Some news outlets cited some difference in his leg movement and a red mark on his arm in video footage released by North Korea on Saturday. The photographs and video, which could not be verified, were the first images of Kim seen since April 11.

Rumors intensified after Kim missed the birthday celebration of his grandfather Kim Jong Sun on April 15, the most important day in North Korea's calendar.

Read more: North Korea's Kim Jong Un appears in video after 21-day absence

Gunfire exchange effort to 'mute speculation'

The gunfire exchange on Sunday morning may be an effort for Kim to regain credibility after his long absence, some experts have suggested.

Choi Kang, vice president of the Asan Institute for Policy Studies, told Reuters news agency he believed the timing of the provocation shows it could have been planned to show that Kim was still in charge of the North Korean military.

"Yesterday, Kim was trying to show he is perfectly healthy, and today, Kim is trying to mute all kinds of speculation that he may not have full control over the military,” Choi said.

"Rather than going all the way by firing missiles and supervising a missile launch, Kim could be reminding us, 'yes I'm healthy and I'm still in power'.”

ed/aw (AFP, Reuters)

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