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Monday, 27 January 2020

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's aunt reappears after six years

A crowded theatre claps at something out of view - but in the front row sits North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, but Kim Kyong Hui can be seen seated two places to his left

The aunt of North Korea's leader Kim Jong-un has been seen in public for the first time since the execution of her husband in 2013.
Kim Kyong-hui is the daughter of North Korea's founder, Kim Il-sung, and sister to former leader Kim Jong-il.
She had not been seen since her husband, Chang Song-thaek, was executed by her nephew for "acts of treachery".
But on Sunday, state media released a photo of her enjoying new year celebrations.

The photo, released by North Korea's state news agency KCNA, showed Kim Kyong-hui seated next to Kim Jong-un and his wife in a crowded theatre in Pyongyang. She was also included in the list of top-ranking officials in attendance.
Oliver Hotham, editor at NK News, which covers events in the reclusive nation, said the reappearance was a surprise.


"Many North Korea watchers had assumed that Kim Kyong-hui had gone into exile or even been killed in the wake of her husband's death," he told Reuters.

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