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Story about Kim Jong-un's uncle being fed to dogs originated with satirist | Story about Kim Jong-un's uncle being fed to dogs originated with satirist |
(about 11 hours later) | |
It sounded just believable enough to catch on: Kim Jong-Un executed his uncle Jang Song-thaek by having him stripped naked and fed to a pack of starving dogs. | It sounded just believable enough to catch on: Kim Jong-Un executed his uncle Jang Song-thaek by having him stripped naked and fed to a pack of starving dogs. |
Yet the story, which was first reported by a Hong Kong tabloid and then picked up in the western press, apparently originated with a satirical post on a Chinese social media network, turning a thinly-sourced horror story into an astonishing example of the media echo chamber gone awry. | Yet the story, which was first reported by a Hong Kong tabloid and then picked up in the western press, apparently originated with a satirical post on a Chinese social media network, turning a thinly-sourced horror story into an astonishing example of the media echo chamber gone awry. |
Kim did, in fact, purge his uncle and former second-in-command last month in remarkably high-profile fashion – the country's official news agency called Jang "an anti-party, counter-revolutionary factional element" and "despicable human scum" when it announced his execution on 13 December. | |
Analysts said that he was probably killed by a firing squad. | |
The starving dogs version first appeared on 12 December in Wen Wei Po, a Beijing-friendly Hong Kong tabloid with a reputation for sensationalism. | |
About two weeks later it was re-reported in English by the Singaporean news daily Straits Times, which took the piece as a barometer of souring Sino-North Korean ties. Late last week scores of western publications jumped on board, including NBC News, the Daily Mail, the New York Daily News, and the London Evening Standard. | |
Yet as the US blogger Trevor Powell pointed out on Monday, the original report lifted the story nearly word-for-word from an 11 December social media post by Pyongyang Choi Seongho, a China-based satirist with millions of followers. The background of the personality's page on Tencent Weibo, China's second most popular microblog, shows a cartoon Kim Jong-un standing on a balcony flanked by military aides, his arms raised and his middle fingers extended. Choi's post includes all of the grisly details that made their way into the American press: Jang and five of his aides were stripped naked, thrown into a giant cage, and "entirely devoured" by 120 Manchurian hunting dogs that had been starved for three days. Kim conducted the hour-long spectacle himself before an audience of 300 North Korean officials, it added. | |
The media mixup comes amid former Basketball superstar Dennis Rodman's continuing efforts to dispel the country's reputation for opacity and cruelty. Rodman arrived in the capital, Pyongyang, on Monday with a group of former NBA players including Vin Baker and Cliff Robinson – the ensemble plans to play an official North Korean team on Wednesday, Kim Jong-un's birthday. | |
"It's about trying to connect two countries together in the world," Rodman, the most high-profile American known to have met Kim, told the Associated Press. "People say so many negative things about North Korea. And I want people in the world to see it's not that bad." | "It's about trying to connect two countries together in the world," Rodman, the most high-profile American known to have met Kim, told the Associated Press. "People say so many negative things about North Korea. And I want people in the world to see it's not that bad." |
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