Seoul spy agency says N. Korean leader's daughter is 'likely successor'
AFP | Seoul, South Korea
The Daily Tribune - www.newsofbahrain.com
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un is grooming his teenage daughter as his successor to lead the nuclear-armed state, according to South Korean MPs briefed by Seoul's spy agency yesterday.
The daughter, Kim Ju Ae, whose age has not been confirmed, has been seen with her father at a variety of events, fuelling speculation that Kim Jong Un has chosen her as heir apparent to lead a fourth generation of hereditary rule by his family.
MP Lee Seong-kweun said the National Intelligence Service (NIS) has judged that she has been chosen as heir.
"Pyongyang is teaching Kim Ju Ae to be heir apparent, indicating she's the most likely successor," Lee told reporters after the agency briefing.
The NIS also told parliamentarians that Kim Jong Un is now "heavily overweight" at "around 140kg", putting him at "high risk of heart-related illness".
Kim, who is widely known to be a cigarette smoker, was said to have shown symptoms of high blood pressure and diabetes in his early 30s, Lee said, quoting the NIS.
North Korea also appears to be adjusting Kim Ju Ae's level of exposure to the public, monitoring how North Koreans react to her role as potential successor, the NIS told MPs.
More than half of her outings with her father were related to military activity, such as overseeing drills, the agency told lawmakers. Kim Ju Ae was referred to as a “great person of guidance” — “hyangdo” in Korean — by state media in March, a term typically reserved for top leaders and their successors.
“Considering the word ‘hyangdo’ was used, which is only reserved for a leader or successor, the NIS is assessing the succession plan is in shape to some extent,” Park Sun-won, another MP, told reporters.
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