An heir for North Korea’s Kim Jong-Un?

Agence France-Presse

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North Korea's next dynastic succession may have been secured, with new TV images of leader Kim Jong-Un's wife suggesting that Pyongyang's first lady recently gave birth

This picture taken by North Korea's official Korean Central News Agency on December 17, 2012 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (centre R, front), accompanied by his wife Ro Sol Ju (centre L, front) and senior officials of the party and North Korean Army paying respect to late leader Kim Jong Il at the Kumsusan Palace in Pyongyang for the first anniversary of his death. AFP PHOTO / KCNA via KNS

SEOUL, South Korea – North Korea’s next dynastic succession may have been secured, with new TV images of leader Kim Jong-Un’s wife suggesting that Pyongyang’s first lady recently gave birth.

When state TV showed Ri Sol-Ju attending a memorial service for her husband’s late father Kim Jong-Il in mid-December, she appeared heavily pregnant with her loose-fit traditional dress barely hiding a swollen belly.

But more recent images of her attending an official New Year’s party showed her wearing a well-fitted two-piece skirt suit with no physical sign of pregnancy.

Speculation was fueled by the official performance, which included an all-woman band singing a version of the Christmas favorite “When a Child is Born” made popular by Johnny Mathis.

South Korean television and newspapers on Thursday ran before-and-after photos with speculative captions.

“The bulging stomach has gone down … has Ri Sol-Ju given birth?” asked the Dong-A Ilbo daily.

“Ri Sol-Ju with her tummy reduced in 11 days. Has she come out right after childbirth?” ran the caption in the Chosun Ilbo daily.

A South Korean government official, quoted by Yonhap news agency, said Ri “appeared to have already given birth, based on analysis of the TV images.”

The fact that Kim Jong-Un even had a wife was only revealed in July last year when pictures emerged of a stylishly-dressed young woman accompanying the new young leader at official events.

Pyongyang’s state media confirmed her identity later in the same month, in a rare move in the isolated and deeply patriarchal nation, which has rarely placed its first ladies under the spotlight.

According to intelligence reports cited by the South Korean media, the couple were married in 2009 and already have one child, although that has never been confirmed.

Ri was described as coming from an ordinary family, with her father an academic and her mother a doctor. She visited South Korea in 2005 as a cheerleader for her country’s squad in the Asian Athletics Championships. – Rappler.com

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