Google – AFP, 10 april 2013
SYDNEY — A former North Korean spy who bombed a South Korean airliner said Wednesday that the North's leader Kim Jong-Un is struggling to control his military and using war talk to shore up support.
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Former
North Korean spy Kim Hyun-Hee arrives in Busan, about 420 kilometres
southeast
of Seoul, on March 11, 2009 (Pool/AFP/File, Kim Kyung-Hoon)
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SYDNEY — A former North Korean spy who bombed a South Korean airliner said Wednesday that the North's leader Kim Jong-Un is struggling to control his military and using war talk to shore up support.
Kim
Hyun-Hee, who said she was ordered by Jong-Un's father Kim Jong-Il to bomb the
airliner in 1987 killing 115 people, said she believes the son is still trying
to establish himself following his father's death in December 2011.
"Kim
Jong-Un is too young and too inexperienced," she told Australia's ABC
television in an exclusive interview from Seoul, where she lives at an
undisclosed location surrounded by bodyguards.
"He's
struggling to gain complete control over the military and to win their loyalty.
That's why he's doing so many visits to military bases, to firm up
support."
The North
has been turning up the rhetoric for weeks and on Tuesday reiterated a warning
that the Korean peninsula was headed for "thermo-nuclear" war,
advising foreigners to consider leaving South Korea.
Kim
Hyun-Hee told ABC there was method in the North Koreans' madness in threatening
thermo-nuclear war.
"North
Korea is using its nuclear programme to keep its people in line and to push
South Korea and the United States for concessions," said Kim, who was
captured after boarding the doomed 1987 plane in Baghdad.
She got off
during a stopover in the Gulf, leaving a time bomb in an overhead compartment,
but was arrested with another agent when they tried to leave Bahrain using fake
Japanese passports.
Both
immediately swallowed cyanide capsules. The man died almost instantly but Kim
survived and was brought to Seoul, where she confessed and was eventually
pardoned.
Kim
published a book entitled "Tears of My Soul" describing her training
at a North Korean spy school, and donated the proceeds to families of victims
of the bombing.
She married
one of her security guards and now lives in Seoul, still fearful that North Korean
assassins could strike at any time, ABC said.
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