![]() | A request that this article title be changed to Kim Ju Ae is under discussion . Please do not move this article until the discussion is closed. |
Respected Daughter Kim Ju-ae | |
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Born | Pyongyang, North Korea | 19 February 2013
Parents |
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Relatives | Kim family |
Korean name | |
Chosŏn'gŭl | 김주애 |
Revised Romanization | Gim Juae |
McCune–Reischauer | Kim Chuae |
IPA | [kim.t̟͡ɕuɛ̝] |
Kim Ju-ae [a] (Korean : 김주애; born 19 February 2013) is a daughter of North Korean supreme leader Kim Jong Un and his wife Ri Sol-ju. The North Korean government has disclosed little information about her and much is unknown about her. The name "Ju-ae" was first mentioned by American basketball player Dennis Rodman after his visit to North Korea in 2012, but it has not been verified by either the North Korean government or South Korean intelligence. North Korean defectors interviewed by South Korean intelligence have claimed two alternate names for her: Un-ju (은주) and Ju-ye (주예).
She made her first public appearance alongside her father at a missile launch in 2022. State media initially referred to her as Kim Jong Un's "beloved" and "precious" daughter before adopting the adjective "respected", which is typically reserved for the most honoured members of North Korean society, such as Kim Jong Un himself. Since her public debut, North Korea analysts have speculated about the reason for her prominence in state media, with some hypothesising that she may be the heir to the position of supreme leader and others arguing against this idea.
The North Korean government has not publicly disclosed Kim Ju-ae's birth date. Ri Sol-ju's lengthy absence from the public eye in 2012 was later attributed to her pregnancy with Kim Ju-ae. [1] South Korea's National Intelligence Service (NIS) estimated in 2023 that she was 10 or 11 years old. [2] South Korean lawmaker Kim Byung-kee, citing "non-NIS sources", claims that she was born in February 2013. [3] His colleague Yi Wan-yong, citing both the NIS and non-NIS sources, claims that Kim Ju-ae has an older brother born in 2010 and a younger sibling of unknown sex born in 2017. [3] However, in a 2023 interview with Radio Free Asia , João Micaelo, a personal acquaintance of Kim Jong Un, expressed doubts that the North Korean leader had ever fathered a son. Micaelo claims to have first met Kim Jong Un in 1998 while attending school together in Switzerland. When they met again in their adulthood, Micaelo claims that Kim Jong Un never mentioned a son, only the daughter he had been appearing in public with. [4] [5]
The North Korean government has also not publicly disclosed her name, and the NIS has not verified any claims on the matter from North Korean defectors. [6] North Korean media initially called her Kim Jong Un's "beloved" (사랑하는) or "precious" (존귀하신) daughter but soon began using the adjective "respected" (존경하는), which is typically reserved for the most honoured members of North Korean society. [7] [8] [9] [10] For example, Kim Jong Un received the title of "respected comrade" shortly after becoming the country's supreme leader. [7]
The name "Ju-ae" was first mentioned by American basketball player Dennis Rodman during a 2013 account of a visit he made to the North Korean capital of Pyongyang the previous year. When discussing Kim Jong Un and Ri Sol-ju, Rodman described "[holding] their baby Ju-ae" and complimented Kim Jong Un as a "good dad" and an "awesome guy". [11] [12] However, Choe Su-yong, a former NIS intelligence officer, claims that Rodman misunderstood the Korean words jeoae (저애), which mean "that girl", and that the child's actual name is Un-ju (은주). Choe cited his North Korean informants as his source. [6]
On 4 November 2022, The Chosun Ilbo reported claims from an unnamed defector, a former military officer who claims to have escorted Kim Jong Un's eldest son and middle daughter overseas. He claimed that the daughter's name is indeed "Ju-ae", and that her elder brother is named "Ju-un", with "Ju" taken from their mother's name and "Un" taken from their father's. He further claimed that the Hanja spelling of the daughter's name is "主愛". [13] Meanwhile, North Korean diplomat Ri Il-kyu, who defected to South Korea in 2023, claims that her name is Ju-ye (주예;主叡) and that North Korean citizens named Ju-ye were ordered to change their names. [14]
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Kim Ju-ae appeared in public for the first time at the test launch of an intercontinental ballistic missile on 18 November 2022. [2] [15] The state-run Korean Central News Agency released photos of Kim Ju-ae and her father inspecting a Hwasong-17 missile together before its launch. [15] Her public debut came amid worsening inter-Korean relations due to a record number of North Korean missile launches. [16] Rachel Minyoung Lee, a senior analyst at the Open Nuclear Network in Vienna, Austria, suggests that the photos may have been intended to "bolster [Kim Jong Un's] image as the father of the people and the nation", and "highlight the necessity of nuclear weapons programmes for the security of future generations", with Ju-ae representing future generations. [16] Kim Ju-ae subsequently made four more public appearances from late November 2022 to early February 2023. [7] On 14 February 2023, the state-run Korea Stamp Corporation unveiled postage stamps featuring Kim Ju-ae and Kim Jong Un at the 18 November missile launch. [17]
Kim Ju-ae was present at a number of official ceremonies and processions in 2023. She participated in official festivities with her father during that year's celebration of the Day of the Shining Star, the birth anniversary of her grandfather Kim Jong Il, on 16 February. [18] She appeared with her father once again on 9 September, at a parade marking the 75th anniversary of the foundation of North Korea. [19] At the end of the year, she attended New Year's Eve celebrations with her father at the May Day Stadium in Pyongyang. [20]
Kim Ju-ae's public prominence has led to speculation by North Korea analysts about her future position in the country. Richard Lloyd Parry of The Times suggests that it may be a response to rivalries within the North Korean government and an attempt to reassert the political supremacy of the Kim family. [21] Go Myong-hyun, a senior fellow at the Asan Institute for Policy Studies in Seoul, likewise argues that Kim Ju-ae's public presentation is that of a princess and is an attempt by state media to normalise the Kim family's rule "by adopting the trappings of [a] European-style monarchy". [16] A number of other analysts have speculated that she has been chosen as her father's successor as supreme leader, which could make her the first woman to serve in the top position. [7] [22] [23] [24] This hypothesis was echoed by the NIS at the start of 2024, after the agency made its annual assessment of North Korea. [20]
In a closed-door meeting on 29 July 2024, the NIS reported to members of South Korea's National Assembly that Kim Ju-ae was being trained to succeed her father as supreme leader. [25] [26] [27] [28] Park Jie-won, who served as the NIS' director from 2020 to 2022, dismissed the report's findings, noting that possible successors had previously been kept hidden from the public eye. He further argued that the North Korean government has historically been patriarchal, making Kim Ju-ae's ascension unlikely. [29] Park's comments were echoed by a number of North Korea analysts who further posited that Kim Ju-ae, being a child, was politically unproven, and so the decision to make her Kim Jong Un's successor would have been premature. [8] [29] [30]
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