This file photo on April 10, 2014 shows North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un in a suit which was published on the front page of the Rodong Sinmun. (Agence France-Presse)
Seoul:
North Korea's ruling party celebrates its 69th anniversary Friday -- an otherwise unexceptional event that has assumed crucial importance as the world waits to see if "missing" leader Kim Jong-Un will finally resurface.
Kim's unexplained absence from the public eye for more than a month has fed a cycle of rumour and wild speculation that only a country as reclusive and impenetrable as North Korea could sustain.
Competing theories range widely from an extended rest period to a leadership coup, via a long list of possible illnesses and ailments including broken ankles, gout and diabetes.
Should he fail to put in an appearance on Friday, the rumour-mill is likely to shift up several gears.
North Korea has more than its fair share of political anniversaries, but the Korean Workers' Party anniversary is one of the bigger ones, and Kim would be expected to show up as he has for the past two years.
"My own feeling is that there has been a health problem, but not a particularly serious one," said Chung Young-Chul, a professor of North Korean studies at Sogang University in Seoul.
"A no-show on Friday would certainly force us to consider the possibility that it's more serious than we thought," Chung said.
What little light North Korea has deemed necessary to shed on the situation has only added to the confusion.
State media alluded at one point to the leader's "discomfort" but one member of a top-level North delegation that visited South Korea last week insisted Kim had no health problem at all.
The uncertainty means that every move or comment by North Korea is now seen through the unreliable prism of what it might say about Kim's situation.
Some saw the surprise visit by the high-ranking delegation as a message that all was fine and normal in Pyongyang.
Others saw the presence of Kim's de-facto number two in the delegation as further evidence that the leader may have been sidelined or pushed out altogether.
It is by no means unprecedented for a North Korean leader to drop out of the public eye for a while.
But it is more noticeable with Kim, who has maintained a particularly pervasive media presence since coming to power after the death of his father Kim Jong-Il in 2011.
Although he has not been seen since he attended a musical concert with his wife on September 3, Kim's name has not disappeared from the state media.
And while he did not join other senior leaders at the unveiling last week of two new giant statues of his father and grandfather Kim Il-Sung, a floral tribute bearing Kim Jong-Un's name was prominently displayed.
The South Korean government has largely avoided playing the guessing-game.
In a meeting Tuesday with legislators, Defence Minister Han Min-Koo reportedly cited intelligence sources saying Kim was staying at a "certain place north of Pyongyang" but offered no other details.
Kim's unexplained absence from the public eye for more than a month has fed a cycle of rumour and wild speculation that only a country as reclusive and impenetrable as North Korea could sustain.
Competing theories range widely from an extended rest period to a leadership coup, via a long list of possible illnesses and ailments including broken ankles, gout and diabetes.
Should he fail to put in an appearance on Friday, the rumour-mill is likely to shift up several gears.
North Korea has more than its fair share of political anniversaries, but the Korean Workers' Party anniversary is one of the bigger ones, and Kim would be expected to show up as he has for the past two years.
"My own feeling is that there has been a health problem, but not a particularly serious one," said Chung Young-Chul, a professor of North Korean studies at Sogang University in Seoul.
"A no-show on Friday would certainly force us to consider the possibility that it's more serious than we thought," Chung said.
What little light North Korea has deemed necessary to shed on the situation has only added to the confusion.
State media alluded at one point to the leader's "discomfort" but one member of a top-level North delegation that visited South Korea last week insisted Kim had no health problem at all.
The uncertainty means that every move or comment by North Korea is now seen through the unreliable prism of what it might say about Kim's situation.
Some saw the surprise visit by the high-ranking delegation as a message that all was fine and normal in Pyongyang.
Others saw the presence of Kim's de-facto number two in the delegation as further evidence that the leader may have been sidelined or pushed out altogether.
It is by no means unprecedented for a North Korean leader to drop out of the public eye for a while.
But it is more noticeable with Kim, who has maintained a particularly pervasive media presence since coming to power after the death of his father Kim Jong-Il in 2011.
Although he has not been seen since he attended a musical concert with his wife on September 3, Kim's name has not disappeared from the state media.
And while he did not join other senior leaders at the unveiling last week of two new giant statues of his father and grandfather Kim Il-Sung, a floral tribute bearing Kim Jong-Un's name was prominently displayed.
The South Korean government has largely avoided playing the guessing-game.
In a meeting Tuesday with legislators, Defence Minister Han Min-Koo reportedly cited intelligence sources saying Kim was staying at a "certain place north of Pyongyang" but offered no other details.
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