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Also Thursday, the National Intelligence Service told lawmakers that Ri visited South Korea in 2005 as a member of North Korea's cheering squad to an Asian athletic competition, according to the office of a lawmaker, Jung Chung-rae. The NIS told lawmakers that Ri is from an ordinary family and studied singing in China, and that she and Kim married in 2009. "Kim Jong Un is breaking with his father's secrecy-shrouded leadership," said Lim Eul-chul, a North Korea expert at South Korea's Kyungnam University. "The revelation of his wife is a sign that Kim wants to show a more open leadership" compared to Kim Jong Il. But little is known about Ri, including her age, although she is believed to be in her early 20s. The senior Kim's 17-year rule was known for its secrecy, and his companions and children were rarely discussed. That includes Kim Jong Un, who was virtually unknown outside North Korea before his formal introduction to the world in late 2010. Kim Jong Il is thought to have had three wives, one of whom was a former dancer who gave birth to Kim Jong Un and another son and, it is believed, a daughter. He is also believed to have had a companion named Kim Ok, said to be a pianist who served as the late leader's secretary starting in the 1980's. The new leader's methods are considered more similar to his grandfather, North Korea founder Kim Il Sung, who was often shown alongside his wife and with children in his arms. None of this necessarily means that major economic or social reforms are imminent in North Korea. Kim has promoted younger officials and recently dismissed former military chief Ri Yong Ho, once seen as a key mentor during Kim's rise to power. The South Korean intelligence agency said it believes Ri was removed because he opposed Kim's moves to strengthen his control over the military. Kim has also continued with moves that have angered the West and his neighbors, including a long-range rocket launch in April, and repeated threats to attack the South. Diplomacy meant to restart talks with the United States and its allies on North Korea's nuclear weapons program has gone nowhere Meanwhile, the country struggles to feed its people. A recent U.N. report said two-thirds of its 24 million people face chronic food shortages, and access to clean water, regular electricity and medicine is still remote for most of those living in the underdeveloped countryside. A U.S.-based rights group also estimates tens of thousands of prisoners remain held in Soviet-style penal camps.
[Associated
Press;
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