AFP
Oluşturulma Tarihi: Ekim 19, 2008 12:52
North Korea may make an "important" announcement on Monday, amid rumors that reclusive leader Kim Jong-Il has fallen seriously ill, a Japanese media report said Sunday.
In South Korea, officials shrugged off the report, saying there was no proof of any planned announcement. Sources told the country's Yonhap news agency that they had not detected any unusual movements in the North.
Japan's Sankei Shimbun newspaper, quoting an unnamed defense ministry source, said Sunday that an "announcement of important information will be made on October 20".
"It is not clear whether the set of information is related to the health of Kim," the conservative newspaper said.
North Korea could move to ban foreigners from entering the country from Monday, the Sankei said, quoting several unnamed sources.
The defense ministry source told the newspaper that no major military movements have been detected in North Korea, which Kim has ruled since the mid-1990s, assuming power following the death of his father Kim Il-Sung.
The Japanese foreign ministry declined to comment on the Sankei report, which cited unsubstantiated rumors that the secretive North could announce Kim’s death or a change in leadership following a coup.
Reports of Kim's illness surfaced after he failed to appear at the country's 60th anniversary parade on Sept. 9. South Korean officials have said he underwent brain surgery following a stroke around mid-August.
North Korean state television a week ago aired photographs of the 66-year-old Kim inspecting a women’s artillery base, although a U.S. official doubted that the images were recent.
Some reports said Kim has suffered partial paralysis.
The Sankei report came one day after Japan's Yomiuri Shimbun said North Korea had ordered its diplomats overseas to prepare for an "important announcement" that may be related to Kim’s health.
The Yomiuri, quoting several unnamed sources familiar with North Korean issues, said Saturday that Pyongyang's diplomats had been ordered not to travel ahead of the announcement, which was expected in a few days.
The Japanese government learned about the order on Friday, the Sankei said.
The Sankei quoted another unnamed source as saying: "It is clear that North Korea is alarmed about the inflow of information and contact with the outside world. It may be a measure to tighten up internal affairs."
In Seoul, a spokesman for South Korea's unification ministry, which handles cross-border relations with North Korea, shrugged off the Japanese media reports.
"I've heard about media reports about North Korea's allegedly imminent important announcement, but there is no confirmed fact," the spokesman, Kim Ho-Nyoun, told AFP.
"Up till now, North Korea has not indicated it will ban foreigners from visiting the country. South Korean civilians are planning to travel to North Korea on Monday or the upcoming week."
Seoul's Yonhap news agency, quoting an unnamed South Korean intelligence source, said the Japanese media reports lacked reliability.
"We keep closely monitoring it, but the current judgment is that it is difficult to believe they are reliable stories," the source told Yonhap, adding there were no unusual movements in the North.
Photo: AP