Monday, December 19, 2011

Another dictator croaked. Goodbye, "Dear Leader" Kim Jong Il!!!

Siuanouk with North Korea "Dear Leader" Kim Jong Il. The most evil one leaves last?
Kim Jong Il, North Korea’s ‘Dear Leader’ Dictator, Dead at 70

Dec 18, 2011
By Bill Austin
Bloomberg

Kim Jong Il, the second-generation North Korean dictator who defied global condemnation to build nuclear weapons while his people starved, has died, Yonhap News reported. He was 70.

The news came in a radio broadcast at noon local time, Yonhap reported, citing North Korea’s official media. Kim probably had a stroke in August 2008 and may have also contracted pancreatic cancer, according to South Korean news reports.

The son of Kim Il Sung, North Korea’s founder, Kim was a chain-smoking recluse who ruled for 17 years after coming to power in July 1994 and resisted opening up to the outside world in order to protect his regime. The potential succession of his little-known third son, Kim Jong Un, threatens to trigger a dangerous period for the Korean peninsula, where 1.7 million troops from the two Koreas and the U.S. square off every day.


“Kim Jong Il inherited a genius for playing the weak hand and by keeping the major powers nervous, continuing his father’s tradition of turning Korea’s history of subservience on its head,” said Michael Breen, the Seoul-based author of “Kim Jong Il: North Korea’s Dear Leader,” a biography. “We have entered an uncertain moment with North Korea.”

Lampooned by foreign cartoonists and filmmakers for his weight, his zippered jumpsuits, his aviator sunglasses and his bouffant hairdo, Kim cut a more serious figure in his rare dealings with world leaders outside the Communist bloc.

Words for Albright

“If there’s no confrontation, there’s no significance to weapons,” he told Madeleine Albright, then U.S. secretary of state, in a 2000 meeting in Pyongyang.

Those words took on greater significance in 2009 as Kim defied threats of United Nations sanctions to test a second nuclear device and a ballistic missile, technically capable of striking Alaska.

The following year North Korea lashed out militarily, prompting stern warnings from the U.S. and South Korea. An international investigation blamed Kim’s regime for the March 2010 sinking of the South Korean naval vessel Cheonan that killed 46 sailors.

Eight months later North Korea shelled a South Korean island, killing two soldiers, two civilians and setting homes ablaze. The act followed reports by an American scientist that the country had made “stunning” advances to its uranium- enrichment program.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

2011 is the good year to get rid of dictators!!! Remaining dictators are Hun Sen of Cambodia, Putin of Russia, Omar al-Bashir of Sudan, Mugabe of Zimbabwe, Hu Jintao of China, Seyed Ali Khamanei of Iran

Anonymous said...

Fidel Castro and brother Raul of Cuba

Anonymous said...

After all, there is actually a natural term limit to every single dicator of the world!

Anonymous said...

the world would be a better place for all if there is no evil people, you know! one done, a couple more to go? god bless our planet earth.

Anonymous said...

So after Kim Jong Il die then the turn of Ah Sihanouk and after Ah Sihanouk then Ah Kwak Hun Xen!!!

Anonymous said...

Ah Sdach Vietcong Norodom Sihanouk &
ah Se-ach Dechooo Kadafi Hun Sen,
ah haeng teang 2 trov vineas taihorng,doy sar KHMER NEAK SNEHA JEAT min karn.

Anonymous said...

If someone wanted to know good or
evil person,look at his friends
attitudes,said a proverb.

Look at ah Sihanouk,ah Hun Sen friends,and the rest of relationships of dictatorship
around the world.

Thank,the dictator is dead one
by one.
So ah Sihanouk and ah Hun Sen
will be dead soon.But these two
men will be dead by Khmer people
killing them.