http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=4912&Itemid=179

      A North Korean Rebel        
      Written by Christopher Green

     

Kim Jong-il's liberal grandson wishes for peace. Fat chance.             

With phrases like “economic improvement measure” swirling around Kim Il-sung 
Square and as short skirts in Pyongyang inspire whispered talk of greater 
freedom for the masses, 2012 has turned into a year of hope for the DPRK.     
 
In such circumstances, it is no surprise that the talk of the town this week is 
an unusually frank, open interview given to former Finnish Minister of Defense 
Elisabeth Rehn by a suave young man named Kim Han-sol.

Any Han-sol interview was always going to be a point of interest for the 
international community. As Kim Jong-il’s grandson, he’s nominally close to the 
center of the family and, as the interview reveals, speaks English like a 
native. The interview content doesn’t disappoint, either; holed up in an 
international college in the Bosnian city of Mostar, the young man speaks of a 
Libyan roommate thrilled by the overthrow of Colonel Qaddafi, of interaction 
with South Korean friends, of his father’s disinterest in politics, and of his 
sadness at never “being sought out” by his grandfather.

It is intriguing, and it is also certainly enough to earn the young man the 
label “reformist element” and/or “new diplomatic channel to Pyongyang” in 
certain quarters. However, such talk is misguided; this was clearly not a 
political message sent from Pyongyang. 

With the Kim Jong-un regime throwing out positive cultural and diplomatic 
signals left and right, it would of course be easy to cast the Han-sol 
interview in a such a political light. His eloquently expressed desire for 
peace and reconciliation with South Korea is pleasant, and fits in nicely with 
trends emerging from the DPRK itself: the short skirts, high heels, Rocky theme 
music and Disney characters of the Moranbong Band’s debut concert on July 6th; 
the appearance in public life of Ri Sol-joo as the charming and homely wife of 
Kim Jong-un; and the leader’s apparent reconciliation with Fujimoto Kenji, the 
former sushi chef to Kim Jong-il who left the country a decade ago amidst 
rumors of espionage. 

However, adding Han-sol to this list is just wishful thinking. The Kim dynasty 
has always worked on very clear principles, and one of them is that anybody who 
represents a threat to the leader is to be kept as far away from Pyongyang as 
possible. As a hereditary dynasty, nowhere is this more important than inside 
the Kim family itself. First it happened to Kim Il-sung’s younger brother Kim 
Yong-ju, who was cast into exile in Jagang Province in 1975 as Kim Jong-il 
worked to “pluck out the roots” of his sole competitor’s power base, and later 
to Kim Pyong-il, Kim Il-sung’s son with former secretary Kim Song-ae and a man 
who has now been a wandering DPRK ambassador to assorted European countries for 
33 years and counting. 

Han-sol’s father Kim Jong-nam is just the most recent of these “branches” of 
the Kim family to be cut off and cast into the ether. Exiled in East Asia, 
Jong-nam occasionally emerges to give brief interviews to Japanese news crews, 
ordinarily in airports or on quiet city streets. A portly and jovial fellow, he 
espouses a reformist agenda and has come out against the very notion of 
dynastic succession, but never discusses family politics and claims never to 
have felt in danger despite giving voice to controversial views. 

Note that women are not subject to the same rules: Kim Jong Il’s sister, the 
ailing Kim Kyung Hee, is one member of the elite leading group in Pyongyang, as 
is his fourth and final wife Kim Ok and his youngest daughter, Kim Jong-un’s 
sister Kim Yeo-jung. But this means nothing. North Korea is a male-dominated 
culture to the very core, and its women are no danger to anyone or anything. 

Conversely, it is extremely telling that neither Jong-nam nor Pyong-il appeared 
at Kim Jong-il’s funeral in Pyongyang last December. Much like the oligarchs of 
President Vladimir Putin’s Russia, the reality is that as long as people like 
Han-sol don’t get involved in central government politics too deeply or too 
often, they can do whatever they want, and that includes giving interviews to 
former Finnish government ministers. All Han-sol needs to remember is that if 
he fails to play by the rules laid out in Pyongyang then the results are sure 
to be painful. T to put it in terms that the young man can relate to, he could 
end up like Kim Jong-il’s other nephew Ri Il-nam, who was gunned down on a 
South Korean city street in 1997. 

It is unquestionably the case that an interview for Finnish television in which 
a member of the Kim clan declares a desire for world peace is to the advantage 
of the government in Pyongyang, for it gives the DPRK a humane face and lends 
weight to notions of pragmatism in the Kim bloodline. But that does not mean 
that Pyongyang was behind the interview itself, or that it was intended to 
convey a political message to the wider global audience. Kim Han-sol is just 
what he appears to be; his own man. 

(Christopher Green is the Manager of International Affairs for Daily NK, a 
North Korea news website based in Seoul, and an editor for Sino NK, which 
analyzes issues involving North Korea's northern border. He is also a PhD 
candidate at Cambridge University )


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