2012年7月4日星期三

North Korean leader Kim Jong-one dies of fashion, food restrictions

North Korea calls for a revolution - the diversity of style. Supreme Leader Kim Jong-one seems to be dressed loosen the grip of the government towards women by allowing them to wear pants, platform shoes and earrings, told ABC News. Pants were previously allowed as a uniform for women in factories or in fields - not fashionable in a statement. "If caught, they sometimes reduce your pants in public there to make a skirt," Park Kyong-Ye, who said after South Korea in 2004, defected, ABC News. This does not mean clean not enjoy the North Korean women, added Park "Yes, we were hungry, but to look for beauty lies in the desire of every woman," she said. But clothing is not the choice of lifestyle that would only be the North Korean despot makes Kim have allowed apparently, that people prohibited on foods before, like burgers and fries nosh; trips encouraged in zoos and amusement parks, and still more mobile phones makes available. "There was clearly some sort of campaign focusing on children and young people," Marcus Noland, a researcher at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, the Daily News said on Monday. "It seems much more sociable than his father (Kim Jong-il), too. It is in the public. He photo opportunities," said Noland, author of "Korea after Kim Jong-il." Kim Jong-il died in December at the age of 69 after a reign of 17 years. Paranoia and deep - in a country of 24 million times as a hermit kingdom, it is an attitude of isolation encouraged. While the U.S. fast-food ban permits from other Western concepts, there are millions of starving its own people, say human rights groups. Beef is a luxury few could afford in North Korea at any time Kim Jong-un, believed to be in his 20s, tried to seem such a dedicated leader. A walk around an amusement park, he railed peeling paint on the rides and overgrown weeds, Bloomberg News reported last month. Official state media quoted Kim's critics make him "the possibility of outdated ideological positions of the head and remove officials in order to stop their old work style." Park, the North Korean defector, told ABC News they are surprised to see that things are changing, for his family, which remains stubbornly in the Stalinist country. Her sister, she says, has a cell phone and asked her clothes and platform shoes. "My sister told me that now there is even a pizzeria and Italian coffee shops in his hometown kid ... and my nephew just had his first real birthday cake west of a new bakery, the rice will not," Park said. But none of this means North Korea begins to decrease his totalitarian regime. Reuters reported earlier this year that the government is always threatening deserters who tried to shoot to flee to China. Kim "has this youth campaign, and it is more flexible on some little things," Noland, "but there is still a gap between what happens in the capital and the difficult situation that people go through in campaigns."

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