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DPRK's Kim has pancreatic cancer: report
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-07-14 06:49 SEOUL: The leader of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) Kim Jong-il has life-threatening pancreatic cancer, the Republic of Korea (ROK) broadcaster YTN said on Monday, citing information gathered from Chinese and South Korean intelligence sources. The report fueled speculation about Kim's health while raising questions about the future of the DPRK and who will make decisions about its nuclear programs.
YTN said the diagnoses of the cancer came around the same time as the stroke. ROK's National Intelligence Service declined to confirm the reports and the Unification Ministry said it had no information to back up the report. US officials did not immediately have comment. The news hurt sentiment on Seoul's main stock index, which posted its biggest loss in more than four months amid renewed US financial and earnings worries. "Such news highlights South Korea's (ROK) geopolitical uncertainty and risks and one thing that investors hate is any uncertainty," said Lee Kyoung-su, a market analyst at Taurus Investment & Securities.
The ROK officials said the military grandstanding was aimed at helping Kim build internal support as he prepares for succession, with his youngest son seen as the likely heir. Survival rate low The US National Cancer Institute puts the five-year survival rate for pancreatic cancer at 5.5 percent. The pancreas makes insulin and other hormones which help the body use or store energy from food. Pancreatic cancer occurs more often in people who have diabetes than in those who do not, it said. Kim has long been thought to suffer from diabetes. Kim Jong-il took power in 1994 when his father died at the age of 82. He assumed the title of general secretary of the ruling Workers' Party and chairman of the National Defense Commission, but has never taken the title of president. His youngest son Kim Jong-un, born in late 1983 or early 1984 and educated in Switzerland, is regarded as the most capable of the DPRK leader's three sons. An expert on the DPRK said Kim Jong-il had been planning for succession and relying on his brother-in-law and senior party member, Jang Song-thaek, to play a pivotal role. "Everything is in place, and things are moving along at a quick pace and it will be done in a short period of time," said Paik Hak-soon of the Sejong Institute near Seoul. Separately, Vice Foreign Minister Wu Dawei of China was holding talks in Seoul on Monday to try to resume six-way talks his country hosts aimed at ending Pyongyang's nuclear arms program in return for massive aid and diplomatic rewards. |