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In 1969, a spy hijacked a South Korean airliner and took dozens of people hostage. The bombing of an airliner in 1987 killed 115 people on board, and a female North Korean spy confessed to the plot. In 1983, North Korean agents masterminded a bombing when then-South Korean President Chun Doo-hwan was visiting Burma. Chun was unhurt but 21 others were killed. High-profile defectors are also key targets. In 1997, a nephew of one of Kim Jong Il's former wives was killed outside a Seoul apartment, 15 years after defecting to the South. Officials never caught the assailants but believe they were North Korean agents. Kim Jong Il reportedly has vowed payback for Hwang's defection. Hwang, a former secretary of the North's ruling Workers Party, has written books and delivered lectures condemning Kim's totalitarian regime. Speaking to journalists and academics in Washington late last month, he said he made the decision to flee the North after Kim's policies led to mass starvation in the mid-1990s. He said he has no regrets about his decision. "Everybody other than (leader) Kim Jong Il in North Korea are slaves, serfs," Hwang said through an interpreter at the time. He says change can come only through diplomacy and economic means, not military force. Hwang's criticism is a "burden for Kim Jong Il and annoyed him because Hwang is a man who knows well about him and was a key figure" in the North, said Yoo Ho-yeol, a professor at Korea University. "For Kim Jong Il, it would have been necessary to punish a betrayer like him to send a message to North Korea's elite." It was Hwang's second trip to the United States. Previous South Korean governments restricted Hwang's trips over concerns that his criticism of North Korea could complicate efforts to reconcile with Pyongyang, and for fears he would be a target for assassination. South Korea's current government lifted the ban, calling it a human rights violation.
[Associated
Press;
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