World | Other World Stories
N.Korea's Kim recovers from stroke, governs country from hospital
North Korea's reclusive, authoritarian leader appears to be recovering from a stroke and in command of the communist country, the chief of South Korea's spy agency says. But Japan's prime minister says Kim Jong Il likely is issuing his orders from a hospital bed.
Seoul: North Korea's reclusive, authoritarian leader appears to be recovering from a stroke and in command of the communist country, the chief of South Korea's spy agency says. But Japan's prime minister says Kim Jong Il likely is issuing his orders from a hospital bed.
South Korean and US officials say the 66-year-old leader suffered a stroke and underwent brain surgery, reportedly in August, but North Korea denies there is anything wrong with the man who is the subject of a cult of personality in the North.
Japanese Prime Minister Taro Aso told lawmakers in Tokyo that his government had information that Kim is probably in the hospital.
"His condition is not so good. However, I don't think he is totally incapable of making decisions," Aso said Tuesday.
The head of South Korea's National Intelligence Service, Kim Sung-ho, told lawmakers the North Korean leader is "not physically perfect" but appears to have recovered enough to run the country without difficulty.
Meanwhile, North Korea's military issued a blistering warning to the South to stop its "confrontational" campaign to discredit Kim and the Stalinist nation, and
threatened to reduce its rival to rubble.
"The puppet authorities had better remember that the advanced pre-emptive strike of our own style will reduce everything opposed to the nation and reunification to
debris, not just setting them on fire," the North's military said in a statement carried Tuesday by the state-run Korean Central News Agency.
The threat comes a day after North Korea demanded during brief talks at the Demilitarized Zone that South Korea halt the flow of propaganda across the border _ just as South Korean activists dispatched leaflets urging North Koreans to rise up against their iron-fisted ruler.
Concerns over the leader's health grew when he missed a September military parade marking North Korea's 60th anniversary. He remained out of public sight for two
months.
Share this article
News Editor's choice
-
Ajtebi's phenomenal assent
The former camel jockey was at the peak of his powers when upstaging Garret Gomez
-
US pushing for more aid to Philippines
Obama administration eyeing $667m security assistance package
-
Mohammad launches H1N1 campaign
Shaikh Mohammad was the first one to receive the H1N1 vaccine.

