North Korean leader caught smoking during anti-smoking drive

Kim Jong-Un holding a burning cigarette in a latest photo seems to have dampened the campaign's expectations


Afp June 11, 2016
A picture released by the newspaper of the North Korea ruling Workers Party on Sept. 14, 2014, shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Un holding a cigarette. PHOTO COURTESY: European Pressphoto Agency

SEOUL: A North Korean anti-smoking campaign has apparently failed to persuade young leader Kim Jong-Un to quit, despite his late father's warning that "a cigarette is like a gun aiming at your heart".

During a public campaign to lower the country's high rate of smoking, Kim was seen without a cigarette for more than 80 days, sparking speculation that he may have kicked the habit.

But a photo in the North's top newspaper, the Rodong Sinmun, last week of Kim smiling and holding a burning cigarette while visiting a children's camp in Pyongyang seems to have dampened such expectations.

North Korea to anoint 'Great Sun' Kim at party congress

There have been plenty of photos of Kim lighting up in the past.

He smoked when he inspected a ballistic missile plant, visited construction sites, toured a hospital and attended various sports competitions and art performances.

He puffed away on an underground train and even in front of his pregnant wife.

The North's state media have been hailing Pyongyang's "hectic" anti-smoking campaign, which has been staged nationwide over the past month.

North Korea party congress pushes nuclear weapons expansion

Korean Central TV recently aired a documentary series focusing on health risks from smoking, with one female interviewee saying: "People who smoke first thing in the morning are disgusting and harmful to others".

Kim's father Kim Jong-Il and grandfather Kim Il-Sung were also heavy smokers. Both died of heart attacks.

"A cigarette is like a gun aimed at your heart", Kim Jong-Il said in early 2000, when he appeared to have kicked the habit.

But he lapsed in 2008 and died three years later.

COMMENTS

Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ