Sunday, May 3, 2020
North and South Korean troops exchange fire along border
SEOUL,
South Korea (AP) — North and South Korean troops exchanged fire along
their tense border on Sunday, the South’s military said, the first such
incident since the rivals took unprecedented steps to lower front-line
animosities in late 2018.
Violent
confrontations have occasionally occurred along the border, the world’s
most heavily fortified. While Sunday’s incident is a reminder of
persistent tensions, it didn’t cause any known casualties on either side
and is unlikely to escalate, observers said.
The
Joint Chiefs of Staff in Seoul said in a statement that North Korean
troops fired several bullets at a South Korean guard post inside the
border zone. South Korea responded with a total of 20 rounds of warning
shots on two occasions before issuing a warning broadcast, it said.
South
Korea suffered no casualties, the military said. Defense officials said
it’s also unlikely that North Korea had any casualties, since the South
Korean warning shots were fired at uninhibited North Korean territory.
The North’s official Korean Central News Agency, or KCNA, did not
immediately report about the incident.
A
preliminary South Korean analysis showed that North Korea’s firing
wasn’t likely a calculated provocation, though Seoul will continue
examining whether there was any motivation for the action, a South
Korean defense official said. He spoke on condition of anonymity, citing
department rules.
Farming
activities around the North Korean area where the firing occurred
continued throughout Sunday and North Korea’s military didn’t display
any other suspicious activities after the gunfire, the official said. He
said there was a thick fog in the area at the time of the incident.
Later
Sunday, South Korea sent a message to North Korea to try to avoid an
escalation, but the North did not immediately reply, according to South
Korea’s military.
The
exchange of fire came a day after North Korea broadcast video of its
leader, Kim Jong Un, reappearing in public after a 20-day absence amid
intense speculation about his health.
KCNA
said Kim attended Friday’s ceremony marking the completion of a
fertilizer factory near Pyongyang along with senior officials. State TV
showed Kim smiling and walking around factory facilities.
Kim
earlier vanished from the public eye after presiding over a Politburo
meeting of the ruling Workers’ Party on April 11 to discuss the
coronavirus. Speculation about his health began swirling after he missed
an April 15 event commemorating the birthday of his grandfather and
state founder, Kim Il Sung, something he had never done since inheriting
power upon his father Kim Jong Il’s death in late 2011.
The
Korean Peninsula remains split along the 248-kilometer (155-mile)
-long, 4-kilometer (2.5-mile) -wide border called the Demilitarized
Zone. It was originally created as a buffer after the end of the 1950-53
Korean War. But unlike its name, an estimated 2 million mines are
peppered inside and near the DMZ, which is also guarded by barbed wire
fences, tank traps and combat troops on both sides.
Under
a set of agreements to reduce border tensions reached in September
2018, the two Koreas destroyed some of their front-line guard posts and
began removing mines from the DMZ later that year. But the efforts
stalled amid a deadlock in negotiations between Kim and President Donald
Trump meant to convince North Korea to give up its nuclear arsenal. The
diplomacy hasn’t made any headway since the second Kim-Trump summit in
Vietnam in early 2019 broke down due to disputes over U.S.-led sanctions
on North Korea.
Earlier
this year, North Korea carried out a slew of missile and other weapons
tests, but they were short-range and none posed a direct threat to the
U.S. mainland.
The
last time there was gunfire along the Korea border was in November
2017, when North Korean soldiers sprayed bullets at a colleague fleeing
to South Korea. The defector was hit five times, but survived and is now
living in South Korea. South Korea didn’t return fire.
Previously,
the two Koreas traded gunfire along the DMZ numerous times, but no
deadly clashes have occurred in recent years. A 2015 land mine blast
that maimed two South Korean soldiers pushed the Koreas to the brink of
an armed conflict. South Korea blamed North Korea for the explosion.
New York schools staying closed through spring, Cuomo says
ALBANY,
N.Y. (AP) — New York’s schools and colleges will remain shut through
the end of the academic year because of the coronavirus pandemic, Gov.
Andrew Cuomo said Friday.
The
order, which applies to 4.2 million students statewide, continues a
shutdown that had been set to expire May 15. The Democratic governor
said it is simply too risky to reopen when the virus is still sending
nearly 1,000 people into the hospital every day.
“We
don’t think it’s possible to do that in a way that would keep our
children and students and educators safe, so we’re going to have the
schools remain closed for the rest of the year, we’re going to continue
the distance learning programs,” Cuomo said.
“We must protect our children,” he said. “Every parent and citizen feels that.”
A
decision about whether to allow summer school inside classroom
buildings will be deferred until the end of May, he said. Whenever
schools are allowed to reopen, each district’s plan would need state
approval. A decision about whether summer camps will be allowed to
operate will also be made later.
The
state’s largest school district, in New York City, had already
determined it could not reopen before the scheduled end of the school
year in June.
Mayor
Bill de Blasio announced April 11 that the city would rely on remote
learning through the end of the school year. At the time, Cuomo
dismissed de Blasio’s announcement as an “opinion,” saying the governor
had the power to make decisions on a statewide basis.
Education
officials said they welcomed Cuomo’s announcement Friday. Robert
Schneider, executive director of the New York State School Boards
Association, said it would not be safe to open schools without knowing
how to safely transport students and put in place social distancing and
other safeguards.
“Clearly,
schools are not ready to open for classroom learning, and they won’t be
until we can adequately protect our students and staff,” Schneider said
in a written statement.
Schools
nationwide are evaluating whether they will keep the institutions
closed, and potentially even continue remote learning in the fall.
Cuomo
made the announcement at his daily coronavirus briefing, which also
included updated fatality and infection numbers. Cuomo said 289 people
died of COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus, on Thursday, down
from 306 the day before.
Other coronavirus-related developments in New York:
____
LAST PATIENTS LEAVE JAVITS
The
last patients left New York City’s Jacob K. Javits Convention center on
Friday after a total of 1,095 patients were treated at the convention
center as the coronavirus ravaged the city during the month of April.
Dr. Chris Tanski, the chief medical officer at the Javits Center, said the last eight patients left Friday afternoon.
Military
personnel including the Army Corps of Engineers turned the massive,
glass-walled facility on the Hudson River into a field hospital as part
of an effort to relieve the strain on the city’s hospital system posed
by the unprecedented coronavirus outbreak.
“We
were able to offload some of the volume from the hospitals,” said
Tanski, a doctor at Upstate University Hospital in Syracuse who was part
of a federal disaster response task force helping New York treated
COVID-19 patients.
_____
WHO ARE THE NEWLY HOSPITALIZED?
The
daily count of patients who enter hospitals across the state for
treatment of COVID-19 has been hovering around 900 to 1,000, a number
that is down from more than 3,000 at the beginning of April but is still
troubling, Cuomo said.
“That
is still too high a number of new cases to have every day,” said Cuomo,
who said he will ask hospitals to start reporting details about newly
infected New Yorkers such as where they work, how they commute, and
demographic information such as age and gender.
”Literally
where do new cases come from?” Cuomo said. “Are they essential workers?
Are they people who are staying at home and getting infected by a
family member? Or are they essential workers who are still traveling and
possibly getting infected at work? Where do they work, how do they
commute?”
Cuomo
said the information will let the state come up with a tailored battle
plan to reduce new daily hospitalizations that are still a burden on the
health care system.
“Let’s
drill down on those 1,000 new cases,” he said. “Where are they coming
from? Why is the infection rate continuing? Who’s getting infected and
let’s get more targeted in our response.”
____
In other developments:
De Blasio said the city is mourning a paramedic from Colorado who died of COVID-19 after traveling to the city help with the response to the pandemic.
“I’ve got to tell you, it just hurts that such a good man has made the ultimate sacrifice for us,” the mayor said.
______
Matthews reported from New York City. Associated Press writer Carolyn Thompson contributed from Buffalo.
Buffett remains optimistic about future despite coronavirus
OMAHA,
Neb. (AP) — Billionaire investor Warren Buffett doesn’t know how or
when the economy will recover from the coronavirus outbreak shutdown,
but he remains optimistic in the long-term future of the United States.
Buffett
said Saturday at Berkshire Hathaway’s online annual meeting that
there’s no way to predict the economic future right now because the
possibilities are still too varied. Berkshire’s meeting was held without
any of the roughly 40,000 shareholders who typically attend because of
the virus.
“We
do not know exactly what happens when you voluntarily shut down a
substantial portion of your society,” Buffett said because it has never
been done. He said it may take several years to understand all the
economic implications of the coronavirus outbreak, but it hasn’t changed
his long-term view because the country has endured wars and depressions
before.
ADVERTISEMENT
“In the end, the answer is never bet against America,” Buffett said.
It’s
not clear how long the virus will continue to weigh on the economy,
Buffett said. He said there could still be unpleasant surprises from the
virus and the way people react to it.
“You’re
dealing with a huge unknown,” Buffett said, so businesses and investors
can’t be certain of what will happen in the near future.
Buffett
said he doesn’t expect major banks to have significant financial
problems during the virus crisis because they are in much better shape
than they were during the financial crisis of 2008.
All
of the events surrounding the annual meeting, including a trade show
where Berkshire companies sell their products, were cancelled this year
because of the coronavirus pandemic, and Buffett had a different partner
for the question session.
Instead
of sitting next to business partner Charlie Munger in an arena filled
with shareholders, Buffett was joined this year by Berkshire Vice
Chairman Greg Abel, who oversees all of the company’s non-insurance
businesses, to answer questions in front of a Yahoo Finance camera.
“It’s
certainly a break with years and years of tradition with Buffett and
Munger,” said Andy Kilpatrick, a retired stockbroker who wrote a Buffett
biography and has attended every annual meeting since 1985.
The
fact that Abel appeared alongside Buffett will add to speculation that
he could one day succeed the 89-year-old billionaire as CEO, but it
likely also reflects the fact that Abel is based relatively close to
Omaha, in Des Moines, Iowa. Abel and fellow longtime executive Ajit
Jain, who oversees Berkshire’s insurance businesses, are seen as the two
most likely successor candidates although Buffett has no plans to
retire.
ADVERTISEMENT
Omaha
missed out on the profits that comes from all the out-of-town visitors
attending the meeting. Local economic development officials estimate
that Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting normally provides a $21.3
million boost to the area.
Buffett
and Abel discussed the nearly $50 billion loss that Berkshire reported
Saturday morning and the huge pile of cash the company is holding.
Berkshire
said it lost $49.7 billion, or $30,653 per Class A share, during the
first quarter. That’s down from last year’s profit of $21.66 billion, or
$13,209 per Class A share.
The
biggest factor in the loss was a $54.5 billion loss on the value of
Berkshire’s investment portfolio as the stock market declined sharply
after the coronavirus outbreak began.
Berkshire’s
revenue grew 1 percent to $61.27 billion. The company said revenue
slowed considerably in April as the virus outbreak negatively affected
most of its businesses. Berkshire closed several of its retail
businesses, such as See’s Candy and the Nebraska Furniture Mart, this
spring while BNSF railroad and its insurance and utility businesses
continued operating while adjusting to reduced demand.
Berkshire
is sitting on a pile of more than $137 billion cash because Buffett has
struggled to find major acquisitions for the company recently and he
wants to be prepared to endure any crisis. Edward Jones analyst Jim
Shanahan said it was striking that Buffett didn’t find any bargains to
invest in at the end of the first quarter.
“The lack of investment activity really sticks out,” Shanahan said.
Buffett
said that Berkshire sold roughly $6.5 billion of stock in April when it
unloaded his company’s roughly 10% stakes in the four largest airlines.
Buffett said he decided that he made a mistake in how he valued
airlines, so he sold all of Berkshire’s American, Delta, Southwest and
United Continental airline stock.
Buffett
said he hasn’t made any big deals during the coronavirus crisis because
he hasn’t seen any on attractive terms. He said many companies have
been able to borrow money in the market in the past two months because
the Federal Reserve stepped in to keep markets moving, so they haven’t
turned to Berkshire for help.
Berkshire
Hathaway Inc. owns more than 90 companies, including the railroad and
insurance, utility, furniture and jewelry businesses. The company also
has major investments in such companies as Apple, American Express,
Coca-Cola and Bank of America.
Emerging from lockdown: ’46 days in the house was enough’
(AP) — From the United States to Europe and Asia, people in many parts of the world are emerging from their homes as virus-related restrictions begin to ease and springtime temperatures climb.
But
the global pandemic took a turn for the worse in other places. India on
Sunday reported more than 2,600 new cases, its biggest single-day jump.
That followed record increases in neighboring Pakistan and Russia the
previous day. There was also worrying news from Afghanistan, where about
a third tested positive in a random test.
China,
which reported two new cases, is seeing a surge in visitors to tourist
spots, many newly reopened, after domestic travel restrictions were
relaxed ahead of a five-day holiday that runs through Tuesday.
Nearly
1.7 million people visited Beijing parks on the first two days of the
holiday, and Shanghai’s main tourist spots welcomed more than a million
visitors, according to Chinese media reports. Many spots limited the
number of daily visitors to 30% of capacity or less, keeping crowds
below average.
Masks
were worn widely around the world, from runners in Spain to beach-goers
in the southern United States. In New York City’s Central Park, joggers
moved past each other without a glance on Saturday, and a steady stream
of folks left tips for a trio working their way through a set of jazz
standards alfresco.
“It’s
great to have an audience after all these weeks,” saxophonist Julia
Banholzer, a native of Germany, said. “All my dates have been canceled
through September, and I don’t know if any will come back this year. New
York is a tough place, but this is just another tough period we need to
get through.”
Neighboring
New Jersey reopened state parks, though several had to turn people away
after reaching a 50% limit in their parking lots. Margie Roebuck and
her husband were among the first on the sand at Island Beach State Park.
“Forty-six days in the house was enough,” she said.
In Spain, many ventured out Saturday for the first time since a lockdown began on March 14.
“I
feel good, but tired. You sure notice that it has been a month and I am
not in shape,” Cristina Palomeque said in Barcelona. “Some people think
it may be too early, as I do, but it is also important to do exercise
for health reasons.”
Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez asked citizens to remain vigilant. COVID-19 has caused more than 25,100 deaths in Spain.
“Until
we have a vaccine, we are going to see more outbreaks,” Sánchez said.
“What we need to guarantee is that these outbreaks do not put our
national health system in danger.”
The
divide in the United States between those who want lockdowns to end and
those who want to move cautiously extended to Congress.
The Republican-majority Senate
will reopen Monday, while the Democrat-controlled House of
Representatives stays shuttered. Senate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell’s decision to convene 100 senators gives President Donald
Trump, a Republican, the imagery he wants of America getting back to
work, despite health worries and a lack of testing.
In
India, air force helicopters showered flower petals on hospitals in
several cities Sunday to thank doctors, nurses and police who have been
at the forefront of the battle against the pandemic. U.S. Navy and Air
Force fighter jets flew over Atlanta, Baltimore and Washington, D.C., on
Saturday in honor of health care workers.
The
number of confirmed cases in India neared 40,000 as the country of 1.3
billion people marked the 40th day of a nationwide lockdown that has
upended lives and millions of jobs. The official death toll reached
1,301.
Afghanistan’s
health ministry said Sunday that 156 people were confirmed positive out
of 500 randomly tested in Kabul, the capital. Ministry spokesman Wahid
Mayar called the results concerning and said that more cases would
surely be found if the government was able to conduct more tests.
Russia
announced 9,633 new cases Saturday, and Pakistan, nearly 1,300, both
one-day highs. More than half of Russia’s new cases were in Moscow,
which is considering establishing temporary hospitals at sports
complexes and shopping malls to deal with the influx of patients.
The
virus has killed more than 240,000 people worldwide, including more
than 66,000 in the United States and more than 24,000 each in Italy,
Britain, France and Spain, according to a count kept by Johns Hopkins
University. Health experts warn a second wave of infections could hit
unless testing is expanded dramatically.
For
most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms. For
some, especially older adults and those with health problems, it can
cause severe illness such as pneumonia, or death.
There
are economic factors to consider as well. The shutdown of businesses
has plunged the global economy into its deepest slump since the 1930s
and wiped out millions of jobs.
Singapore
announced Saturday it will let selected businesses reopen from May 12
in a cautious rollback of a two-month partial lockdown, and Sri Lanka
said the government and private sector should resume work from May 11
“to ensure a return to normalcy in civilian life and to revive the
economy.”
Bangladesh,
which opened thousands of garment factories last month, confirmed 552
new cases on Saturday. The South Asian country’s health care system is
fragile, and authorities say they would not be able to provide
ventilation and intensive care support for more than 500 people at one
time.
___
Porter reported from New York. AP journalists around the world contributed to this report.
Saturday, May 2, 2020
Whitmer: Stay-home order still in place; some return to work
LANSING,
Mich. (AP) — Gov. Gretchen Whitmer said Friday that Michigan’s
stay-at-home order remains in effect through May 15 despite Republicans’
refusal to extend her underlying coronavirus emergency declaration, as
she amended it to allow construction, real estate and more outdoor work
to resume in person next week.
The
Democratic governor, who may be sued by the GOP-led Legislature,
addressed reporters the same day that President Donald Trump tweeted she
should “make a deal” with conservatives who protested her restrictions
at the Capitol a day earlier. She denounced the protest as ”disturbing,”
noting there were swastikas, Confederate flags, nooses and some people
with assault weapons who “do not represent who we are as Michiganders.”
“We’re
not in a political crisis where we should just negotiate and find some
common ground here. We’re in a public health crisis,” Whitmer said.
”We’re in the midst of a global pandemic that has already killed almost
4,000 people in our state.”
Whitmer
said she will continue listening to epidemiologists, public health
experts and business leaders — “not to pollsters and not to people with
political agendas.”
The
state health department reported nearly 1,000 additional confirmed
cases of COVID-19 and 77 more deaths, bringing the totals to more than
42,300 cases and 3,866 deaths.
Whitmer
late Thursday issued directives both proclaiming that the coronavirus
emergency continues under a 1945 law and declaring new states of
emergency and disaster under a 1976 law after lawmakers refused her
request for a 28-day extension. The declarations are the foundation of
her stay-home order and other measures to curb the spread of the virus.
Republicans,
who want more input on gradually restarting the economy and say a ban
on elective medical and dental procedures should be lifted, also voted
to authorize a lawsuit challenging her authority and actions. They
question the legality of her stay-home measure since the Legislature did
not lengthen the state of emergency.
But
Whitmer said the stay-home order rests on gubernatorial powers in the
1945 law, which does not require legislative consent nor an extension.
“If
the 1976 law supersedes the ’45 law, they would have repealed it. It
was an intentional decision to keep both of these sources of authority
for the chief executive of the state of Michigan,” she said. “It is for
times like these that that authority is really important, when lives are
on the line.”
The
later law has a provision saying it should not be construed to “limit,
modify, or abridge” a governor’s authority to proclaim an emergency
under the earlier law or to exercise powers vested by the state
constitution.
House Speaker Lee Chatfield, a Republican, said “the judiciary will have the final say.”
Whitmer
last week let some businesses like plant nurseries and bike repair
shops reopen, as well as stores selling nonessential supplies for
curbside pickup or delivery.
On
Friday, she allowed work that is traditionally and primarily done
outdoors — forestry workers, power equipment technicians, parking
enforcers — to resume next Thursday. Construction workers, real estate
agents, appraisers, brokers, inspectors and surveyors also will be able
to work in person. So will manufacturing workers who make items like
partitions, cubicles and furniture that will help businesses modify
their workplaces amid the pandemic.
Whitmer
hinted that auto plants may soon reopen as the curve of cases continues
to flatten, as long as the United Auto Workers union can ensure
employees feel safe — similarly to how building trade unions backed the
construction restart plan.
Trump
earlier encouraged Whitmer — whom the public has backed over him in
polling — to “give a little” and “put out the fire” with protesters,
attempting to strike a balance between supporting demonstrators who
express affinity for him and minding the advice of his scientific
experts.
Some
of the hundreds of protesters — many without face coverings — entered
the Capitol on Thursday and demanded to be let onto the House floor,
which is not allowed. The gallery was closed to the public to allow room
for representatives and reporters to spread apart. Some demonstrators
in the Senate gallery were openly carrying guns, which is legal in the
Statehouse but was criticized by Democratic lawmakers.
Senate
Majority Leader Mike Shirkey, a Republican who had encouraged people to
protest, said many did so safely and responsibly. But he said several
others are a “bunch of jackasses” who used intimidation and threats.
“I
condemn their behavior and denounce their tactics,” he said. “Their
actions hurt their cause and steal from the rights of others by creating
an environment where responsible citizens do not feel safe enough to
express themselves.”
Trump
has previously tried to pressure the first-term governor, who leads a
battleground state and is on presumptive Democratic presidential nominee
Joe Biden’s running mate list.
___
Associated Press writer Zeke Miller in Washington contributed to this report.
Kim reappears in public, ending absence amid health rumors
SEOUL,
South Korea (AP) — North Korean leader Kim Jong Un made his first
public appearance in 20 days as he celebrated the completion of a
fertilizer factory near Pyongyang, state media said Saturday, ending an
absence that had triggered global rumors that he may be seriously ill.
The
North’s official Korean Central News Agency reported that Kim attended
the ceremony Friday in Sunchon with other senior officials, including
his sister Kim Yo Jong, who many analysts predict would take over if her
brother is suddenly unable to rule.
State
media showed videos and photos of Kim wearing a black Mao suit and
constantly smiling, walking around facilities, applauding, cutting a
huge red ribbon with a scissor handed by his sister, and smoking inside
and outside of buildings while talking with other officials.
Seemingly
thousands of workers, many of them masked, stood in lines at the
massive complex, roaring in celebration and releasing balloons into the
air. A sign installed on a stage where Kim sat with other senior
officials read: “Sunchon Phosphatic Fertilizer Factory; Completion
Ceremony; May 1, 2020.”
There
were no clear signs that Kim was in discomfort. He was shown moving
without a walking stick, like the one he used in 2014 when he was
recovering from a presumed ankle surgery. However, he was also seen
riding a green electric cart, which appeared similar to a vehicle he
used in 2014.
It
was Kim’s first public appearance since April 11, when he presided over
a ruling Workers’ Party meeting to discuss the coronavirus and
reappoint his sister as an alternate member of the powerful
decision-making Political Bureau of the party’s Central Committee. That
move confirmed her substantial role in the government.
Speculation
about his health swirled after he missed the April 15 birthday
celebration for his late grandfather Kim Il Sung, the country’s most
important holiday, for the first time since taking power in 2011.
The
possibility of high-level instability raised troubling questions about
the future of the secretive, nuclear-armed state that has been steadily
building an arsenal meant to threaten the U.S. mainland while diplomacy
between Kim and President Donald Trump has stalled.
Some
experts say South Korea, as well as its regional neighbors and ally
Washington, must begin preparing for the possible chaos that could come
if Kim is sidelined by health problems or even dies. Worst-case
scenarios include North Korean refugees flooding South Korea or China or
military hard-liners letting loose nuclear weapons.
ADVERTISEMENT
“The
world is largely unprepared for instability in North Korea,” said
Leif-Eric Easley, a professor at Ewha University in Seoul. “Washington,
Seoul and Tokyo need tighter coordination on contingency plans while
international organizations need more resources and less controversy
over the role of China.”
South
Korea’s Unification Ministry, which deals with inter-Korean affairs,
confirmed Kim’s visit to the fertilizer factory and said it was part of
his efforts to emphasize economic development. The ministry called for
discretion on information related to North Korea, saying that the
“groundless” rumors of past weeks have caused “unnecessary confusion and
cost” for South Korea’s society and financial markets.
South
Korea’s government, which has a mixed record of tracking Pyongyang’s
ruling elite, repeatedly downplayed speculation that Kim, believed to be
36, was in poor health following surgery.
The
office of President Moon Jae-in said it detected no unusual signs in
North Korea or any emergency reaction by its ruling party, military and
cabinet. Seoul said it believed Kim was still managing state affairs but
staying at an unspecified location outside Pyongyang.
The
KCNA said workers at the fertilizer factory broke into “thunderous
cheers” for Kim, who it said is guiding the nation in a struggle to
build a self-reliant economy in the face of “head wind” by “hostile
forces.”
The report didn’t mention any direct comment toward Washington or Seoul.
Speaking
to reporters at the White House, Trump declined to comment about Kim’s
reappearance but said he would “have something to say about it at the
appropriate time.”
State
media reported Kim was carrying out routine activities outside public
view, such as sending greetings to the leaders of Syria, Cuba and South
Africa and expressing gratitude to workers building tourist facilities
in the coastal town of Wonsan, where some speculated he was staying.
It
wasn’t immediately clear what caused Kim’s absence in past weeks. In
2014, Kim vanished from the public eye for nearly six weeks and then
reappeared with a cane. South Korea’s spy agency said he had a cyst
removed from his ankle.
Analysts
say his health could become an increasing factor in years ahead: he’s
overweight, smokes and drinks, and has a family history of heart issues.
If he’s
suddenly unable to rule, some analysts said his sister would be
installed as leader to continue Pyongyang’s heredity dynasty that began
after World War II.
But
others question whether core members of North Korea’s elite, mostly men
in their 60s or 70s, would find it hard to accept a young and untested
female leader who lacks military credentials. Some predict a collective
leadership or violent power struggles.
Following
an unusually provocative run in missile and nuclear tests in 2017, Kim
used the Winter Olympics in South Korea to initiate negotiations with
Washington and Seoul in 2018. That led to a surprising series of
summits, including three between Kim and Trump.
But
negotiations have faltered in past months over disagreements in
exchanging sanctions relief and disarmament steps, which raised doubts
about whether Kim would ever fully deal away an arsenal he likely sees
as his strongest guarantee of survival.
Kim
entered 2020 vowing to build up his nuclear stockpile and defeat
sanctions through economic “self-reliance.” Some experts say the North’s
self-imposed lockdown amid the coronavirus crisis could potentially
hamper his ability to mobilize people for labor.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)
-
Tit for Tat ? ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) — A statue of abolitionist Frederick Douglass was ripped from its base in Rochester on the an...
-
NEW YORK (AP) — As New York City faced one of its darkest days with the death toll from the coronavirus surging past 4,000 — more th...