NEWS

North Koreans don't know about Kim Jong Nam assassination. So the South will blare it to them, by loudspeaker

Patrick Winn
GlobalPost

In North Korea, the Kim clan can do no wrong.

An undated photo made available on Feb.16, 2017 shows a South Korean soldier standing near loudspeakers at the border with North Korea, at an undisclosed location in South Korea.

Its deceased Dear Leader, Kim Jong Il, was practically deified. Official accounts say he was born beneath a double rainbow — and his earthly arrival caused a new star to appear in the cosmos.

Dear Leader’s kids, however, could have used an extra helping of supernatural serenity. It appears Kim Jong Il’s oldest son was killed this week on the orders of his youngest son, the paranoid dictator Kim Jong Un.

Here are a few details you won’t hear on the Pyongyang nightly news.

The older brother — Kim Jong Nam, a family black sheep — was killed by female assassins.

This combination of file photos shows North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, left, on May 10, 2016, in Pyongyang, North Korea, and Kim Jong Nam, right, exiled half brother of Kim Jong Un, in Narita, Japan, on May 4, 2001.

The women, presumably deployed by the regime, struck their target on Feb. 13 inside a busy Malaysian airport. Kim Jong Nam was trying to check into a flight when he was squirted in the face with fast-acting poison. One of his suspected killers actually wore a shirt that read “LOL.”

Safe to say, these ugly details are not widely known inside North Korea. The nation is hermetically sealed off from most outside reports.

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South Korean psy-ops agents, however, have found a way to penetrate that seal. Their method is fairly crude. They’ve simply lined up ultra-powerful loudspeakers along the chilly border with the North.

According to the outlet, The Chosun Ilbo, the South Korean military will use these speakers to blast news of the assassination into the country.

This is not a new technique. For years, South Koreans have sporadically cranked up these speakers to transmit inconvenient facts to their northern counterparts.

Each broadcast is meant to prune the thicket of state indoctrination, a web of myths planted in North Korean minds since childhood.

The loudspeakers clearly annoy the Pyongyang regime, which previously declared that “psychological warfare against the North is lighting the fuse of war.” They’ve even threatened to blow them up.

In an ideal scenario, the speakers would send subversive news rippling through the information-starved nation of 25 million. But it’s unclear if this tactic is all that effective.

Under ideal weather conditions, the sound penetrates North Korea by about 15 miles. It mostly rings out over terrain inhabited by border guards.

The broadcasts aren’t limited to anti-regime screeds, says Robert Kelly, a political science professor at South Korea’s Pusan National University who previously spoke to PRI.org.

According to Kelly, they also play “fun stuff such as popular music, sports scores and Entertainment Tonight-style crap.”

“Then they mix in information about North Korea’s economic performance and how corrupt the North Korean elite are,” he says. “So you get a mix of undisputed truth-telling, entertainment and propaganda.”

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It’s unclear how much the average North Korean knows about Kim Jong Nam’s existence. Told straight, his biography would indicate that the Kim clan is not 100% free of scandal — and would undermine the notion that their bloodline is somehow sacred.

South Korean intelligence has long claimed that Kim Jong Nam was targeted for death and that he’d begged his little brother for mercy. Born to a different mother than Kim Jong Un, he was estranged from the family.

Kim Jong Nam was perhaps the most Westernized of his siblings. He studied in Europe and resided in the Chinese territory of Macau, a former Portuguese colony.

He even maintained a secret Facebook account — a pedestrian act in most of the world but a severe crime in his native North Korea.

This article originally appeared on GlobalPost and PRI.org. Its content was created separately to USA TODAY.

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