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¤ýÀÛ¼ºÀÏ 2014-09-27 05:13
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Is North Korean leader Kim Jong Un lying low?
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
NEW: North Korean state TV says Kim Jung Un is "suffering from discomfort"
North Korea's Kim Jong Un does not attend a prominent state meeting
Speculations are rampant that Kim has health problems because of his limping
KCNA shows that Kim's last public appearance was on September 4 


(CNN) -- North Korean leader, Kim Jong Un hasn't been seen at a public event for three weeks, including a prominent state meeting that he has attended every year since coming to power in late 2011.

On Thursday, Kim was conspicuously absent from the Supreme People's Assembly, which is North Korea's parliament attended by officials of the party, the military and various national organizations. A prominent seat remained empty on stage surrounded by North Korea's top brass.

"We expected to see him at the Supreme People's Assembly, because he had attended that session every time," said Yoo Ho-Yeol, a professor of North Korean studies at Korea University in Seoul. "So we are speculating that he might have problems in his health."
 

On Thursday, North Korean state TV referred to Kim, saying, "The wealth and prosperity of our socialism is thanks to the painstaking efforts of our marshal, who keeps lighting the path for the people, like the flicker of a flame, despite suffering from discomfort."

The 31-year-old leader's absence has fueled speculation that Kim has a health problem, as some observers have pointed to weight gain, as well as a limp when he was seen walking in July.

Korea's state-run news agency, KCNA, routinely catalogs Kim's activities and public appearances. A count of KCNA announcements about Kim's public appearances went from 24 events in July to 16 in August. It dwindled to just one event in September. His last listed public appearance was a September 4 concert, which he attended with his wife Ri Sol Ju, according to KCNA.

While it's difficult to know what's happening in North Korea, the absence of its leader from public view has given hints in the past.

"We had that kind of occasion when Kim Jong Il was seriously sick in 2008," said Yoo.

That year, the elder Kim's absence from parades and national events raised questions about the leader's health. U.S. and South Korean intelligence believed that Kim Jong Il had suffered severe health problems and possibly a stroke.

Kim died at the age of 69, in December 2011, and his son assumed command.


By Madison Park, CNN
September 26, 2014 -- Updated 1823 GMT (0223 HKT)
 

20 reasons it's great to be a tourist

By Duncan Forgan, for CNN
September 26, 2014 -- Updated 0711 GMT (1511 HKT)
STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • More people are traveling internationally than ever before
  • To mark World Tourism Day, we honor camera toters and museum goers the world over
  • Hotels! Find a great one and you'll never want to leave
  • Been looking for some pleasure reading time? Go on vacation
(CNN) -- With their worldly sophistication, ready cash and penchant for smiling all the time, tourists can be a much-hated group.

But before you laugh at the starstruck look in their eyes or mock the clattering chaos of their attempts to follow a tour group leader, understand this: they don't care.

They're having the time of their life -- and more people than ever are joining them.

According to the latest UN's World Tourism Organization (WTO) figures, international tourist arrivals grew by 4.6% in the first half of this year.

Some 517 million international tourists arrived at destinations between January and June 2014, 22 million more than in the same period in 2013.

And we all know why.

Being a tourist is awesome.

So awesome that the WTO has set an annual day of observance to highlight tourism's social, cultural, political and economic value.

In honor of World Tourism Day, celebrated September 27, we've compiled 20 reasons it's great to be a camera-toting out-of-towner with a sudden need to stand in line for a Renaissance art museum.

What are your favorite things about being a tourist? Drop a note in the comments section below.

1. You can eat like a feudal lord every night, and still lose weight from all the walking.

2. Whether you're terrifying yourself on local transport or basting yourself in the sun next to a bag of beer, it beats what your friends are doing back home.

3. The guilt attached to not utilizing your gym membership is far less severe than it is back home.

 
"What day is it?" "Feels like Friday."

4. Cold beers on the beach/in a hammock/in bed/in a bar in the middle of the afternoon? Don't mind if we do.

More: 8 best beer towns in the USA

5. Bringing home a tan and worldly knowledge is like dousing yourself in pheromones.

6. You can finally finish that book you've been falling asleep with every night for the last three months.

7. The weather. Even the rain seems somehow exotic when abroad.

More: In defense of rainy days -- why drizzle shouldn't ruin travel

8. The buzz of walking around a new place on a Wednesday morning knowing you're not at work? Can't beat it.

9. Hotels are like mini-vacations unto themselves, with someone always on hand to clean up the bathroom and serve you drinks downstairs.

 
In any other clothes you'd look out of place.

10. You can wear anything. Baggy Thai fisherman pants with a beer singlet? Go on, no one will bat an eyelid.

More: 7 travel fashion trends that should be banned

11. You learn about the country you're visiting through experience, rather than National Geographic. Or CNN Travel.

12. You don't have to wait til 5 o' clock to declare happy hour. Start anytime.

13. From fried monkey toes in Indonesia to a perfectly grilled steak at Peter Luger in New York, you get to try local specialties previously seen only on TV.

More: A traveler's guide to eating insects

14. Those childish antics people get up to in pictures -- fingertips on the top of the Eiffel Tower, posing with fake gladiators at the Coliseum -- yep, you get to do them, too.

15. The nearest you get to cooking is pointing at the fish you want grilled for your dinner.

16. You get to mingle with a range of nationalities. Then escape them the next day.

More: Who are the world's worst tourists?

 
Do you really need to hear "La Cucaracha" again? Go ahead, request it, they won't mind.

17. Nothing beats vegging out on a plane or beach with your favorite new playlist blasting through your ear buds. Except discovering a world of musicians eager to introduce you to new music from Mexico to Morocco.

18. Tanned fat looks better than pale fat.

19. Extravagant spending is easily justified when you're traveling. When will you ever get back here? Might as well make the most of it.

20. You can jettison your mobile phone and laptop without stress. Phileas Fogg wasn't online for hours at a stretch every day and you don't have to be either.

 

 

 
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