Kim Jong Un has not been seen in public for more than two weeks. If he's hale and hearty, to dispel the frenzied speculation to the opposite, it should be a simple matter of having him pop up somewhere to have his photo taken.
Officials in South Korea say they think Kim is fine. The regime's ally China is trying to say as little as possible about it. But a Chinese medical team reportedly went to North Korea recently, and it certainly seems something is amiss after the young leader's recent heart surgery.
State media reported April 22 that Kim sent a message to the Syrian president. Today he's reported as having thanked officials in Wonsan for their help constructing the coastal tourist region.
Still, there have been no pictures, or reports of him attending a meeting or event, and such rote pronouncements by the regime's propaganda machine would continue regardless.
While there are also no unusual military movements inside North Korea, that could rapidly change if Kim were to die. There is no pre-ordained successor (though his sister has taken a more prominent role), and power plays could well erupt.
Kim did disappear before in 2014, with chatter he was suffering gout, an ankle injury or even had been overthrown. He showed up six weeks later without explanation, walking with a cane.
So once again on Kim we're locked in a global guessing exercise. One with enormous potential repercussions.
— Rosalind Mathieson
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