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China protected Kim's oldest son over attack plot: report

Anti-proliferation naval drill starts off S.Korea
Seoul (AFP) Oct 13, 2010 - South Korea for the first time Wednesday joined an international naval exercise to prevent the transfer of weapons of mass destruction, despite North Korea's strong opposition. The two-day drill off the southern port of Busan involves warships and aircraft from the United States, host South Korea, Japan and Australia, the defence ministry said. "It marks the first time that South Korea has participated in the PSI drill," a spokesman told AFP, referring to the US-led Proliferation Security Initiative aimed at blocking cargoes of weapons of mass destruction. About 10 ships from South Korea, the United States and Japan -- including a US guided missile destroyer and two Korean destroyers -- are involved, ministry officials told Yonhap news agency.

Australia sent maritime patrol planes and anti-submarine helicopters, the agency said. The ministry spokesman declined to give figures. South Korea was previously only an observer in the initiative for fear of offending its communist neighbour. After the North's second nuclear test in May last year, it announced it would become a full member. Seoul announced it would host the latest exercise after accusing Pyongyang of torpedoing one of its warships in March and killing 46 sailors. The North denies carrying out the attack and has said in the past that the South's participation in the drill would be seen as a "declaration of war". The South says the drill does not target specific countries. Other nations, apart from the four taking part, sent representatives and observers for the exercise.
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) Oct 13, 2010
Aides to the youngest son and heir apparent of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il planned an attack last year on Kim's oldest son but were warned off by China, a report said Wednesday.

South Korea's Chosun Ilbo newspaper, citing a government source, said close aides of youngest son Jong-Un plotted an attack on Jong-Nam after the leader had picked Jong-Un as heir apparent in January 2009.

Jong-Nam has been living mainly in Beijing and the Chinese territory of Macau since falling out of favour with his father.

In an frank interview with Japan's TV Asahi broadcast Tuesday, he expressed opposition to another hereditary power transfer in the communist state.

Chosun quoted its source as saying Jong-Un's aides last year tried "to do something to Kim Jong-Nam, who has a loose tongue abroad" but China apparently warned them not to lay a hand on him on Chinese soil.

The paper said Jong-Nam reportedly has close ties with China's powerful "princelings", an elite group of the children of senior officials.

"Kim Jong-Nam won't go back to the North but stay in China," the source added.

South Korea's intelligence agency declined comment on the newspaper report.

Jong-Un's status as leader-in-waiting was effectively made public after Pyongyang made him a four-star general and gave him key ruling party posts late last month.

He appeared Sunday with his father at a massive military parade seen as a coming-out party.

Jong-Nam fell out of favour when he was caught trying to enter Japan with a fake passport in 2001.

China is the impoverished North's sole major ally and economic lifeline, its biggest trade partner and energy supplier.

"Personally I am opposed to the hereditary transfer to a third generation of the family," Jong-Nam told TV Asahi in the interview conducted in Beijing on Saturday.

Leader Kim Jong-Il succeeded his own father Kim Il-Sung, who died in 1994.

However, the 39-year-old Jong-Nam also said he would accept his father's choice and that "for my part, I am prepared to help my younger brother whenever necessary while I stay abroad".

A North Korea expert at Seoul's Dongguk University, Kim Yong-Hyun, said Jong-Nam's comments appeared to be a signal from the regime.

"His interview is seen as a message to the outside world that there is no internal friction over the transfer of power," the professor told AFP.

"Jong-Nam is also saying he will continue to stay abroad. The interview indicates there is no room for him to play in North Korea's current power structure."



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China's Hu invites N.Korean leadership to visit
Beijing (AFP) Oct 11, 2010
Chinese President Hu Jintao has invited North Korean leader Kim Jong-Il and the country's new ruling line-up to visit China, state media said Monday, as Kim moves his son into position to succeed him. The invitation was extended on Hu's behalf by a senior Chinese official who attended a massive military parade in Pyongyang on Sunday to mark the North Korean ruling party's 65th anniversary, C ... read more







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