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We should aim to present as clear a story as possible, indicating the necessary doubts, and only naming sources inline where they add relevance. At the moment, it reads more like a series of rumours than an account of his life.Earthlyreason (talk) 10:40, 18 July 2009 (UTC)
A free use image of Kim Jong-nam as an adult cannot be found as of yet. There is [1] from [2], which is a suitable image in terms of content, however, as the photograph was taken in Japan (at Narita Airport), Japanese copyright law applies, and so, cannot be used. I have not been able to find any suitable images that were taken within the DPRK that mark his adult resemblance (only a few childhood photos and family photos), which would be able to fall into the category of Template:CopyrightedFreeUse-DPRK. For use with that template, images must be taken within the DPRK. -- 李博杰 | —Talk contribs email 02:14, 25 July 2009 (UTC)
There is an RfC on the question of using "Religion: None" vs. "Religion: None (atheist)" in the infobox on this and other similar pages.
The RfC is at Template talk:Infobox person#RfC: Religion infobox entries for individuals that have no religion.
Please help us determine consensus on this issue. --Guy Macon (talk) 02:47, 26 April 2015 (UTC)
There is no mention of "Kim Jimmy" in any sources I've seen, and the second son is not mentioned in the body of the article. Is this vandalism? 74.8.89.79 (talk) 13:53, 13 May 2015 (UTC)
In this BBC News report, there seems to be some doubt as to whether the person confirmed by the authorities to be dead is actually Kim Jong-nam. The article says "they named him [the dead man] as "Kim Chol", not Kim Jong-nam" and "An official statement released by Malaysian police named the dead man as "Kim Chol", born 10 June 1970. Kim Jong-nam was born on 10 May 1971." However, they also have this news report, which doesn't give the same doubt, and says that he "lived a life in exile until his death in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on 14 February". Can anyone explain the conflicting reports, and does it make any difference to the article? Seagull123 Φ 16:39, 14 February 2017 (UTC)
Comment: Not sure if this is relevant, but I removed a quote from the article claiming to be from the BBC News report, as I could not find the quote in the article. HelgaStick (talk) 20:08, 14 February 2017 (UTC)
According to this Independent article, there was an assassination attempt in Macau in 2011, but I found no reference in this wiki article.Goatonastik (talk) 20:30, 14 February 2017 (UTC)
The Malaysian police have said there was "no sign" he was murdered, so I have changed the article to reflect this.--Jack Upland (talk) 22:34, 14 February 2017 (UTC)
At least the body is confirmed to be that of Kim Jong-nam as the body's fingerprints were indeed that of Kim. Korean government also stores the fingerprints of all citizens since 1964 for identification purposes, a practice that has no equivalents in the world,thus having reliable biometrics /forensics technology. CCTV surveillance material, which is rare in Western countries except for UK and certain parts of the US, also show circumstantial evidence of murder.The incident did not happen in the Western or British world; so judging the whole situation from Western or British perspective is not proper. (Nor is a dead body required for guilty conviction in murder cases) Even assuming that wiki is very anglocentric and follows the perspective and world view of certain academic societies which view the world's matters in a different perspective from the rest of the world, the attitude towards the current incident is not proper. Neither Malaysia nor Korea are lax societies where a terrorist was able to travel through many countries before being shot dead by an Italian policeman. Especially Korea, which is a very stringent surveillance country where high res intelligent CCTVs are sometimes installed in a few metres' distance with overlapping view areas and capable of identifying a subject in seconds. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Noob2013 (talk • contribs) 04:09, 16 February 2017 (UTC)
The following statement "Kim's extensive Facebook usage under this pseudonym since at least 2010, and usage of commercial email services for communications, may have made it easier for North Korean agents to seek his whereabouts and track his movements" Seems to imply guilt on the part of the North Koreans. That hasn't been proven yet and, in my thoughts, should be modified. Thoughts?ENumC (talk) 11:24, 10 May 2017 (UTC)
The non-free photos were removed in 2004, when he was alive. However, he is now dead, so no new photos can be created, so can someone add fair-use images of him from before? -- 65.94.168.229 (talk) 22:58, 14 February 2017 (UTC)
"It is believed that Kim Jong-un, Jong-nam's youngest half-brother, became the new heir apparent due to this incident."
This sentence is confusing because it is not apparent what "due to this incident" means.
First, it's not clear whether it's "it is believed due to" or "he became the new heir apparent due to".
Second, it is not clear exactly which incident this sentence refers to. It can be one of three, either "the Tokyo incident" in the former paragraph (not mentioned in the source 11), or the propaganda campaign about Kim Jong-nam's half-brothers' mother (not mentioned in the source 11), or the ROKS Cheonan sinking (mentioned in the source 11, but it can't be referred to as "this insident" due to its absence in this article).--Adûnâi (talk) 13:38, 16 February 2017 (UTC)
I realize that there are a lot of media sources telling all this exactly the same way, so this is difficult. But there are some gaps I really wish we could fill.
1) Why was the Disneyland visit such an issue? Was it the fake passport, the country (Japan) or the stated reason (Disneyland) that offended people? (For example, why couldn't he just say something like he was looking at ideas for setting up recreation parks for North Korean kids?)
2) Is anyone concerned about the chemical sprayed at the airport? (I mean, I'd have thought that if you spray a lethal poison at an airport that they would clear the place, shut it down, have hazmat on the scene, track down people who might have been exposed, etc.)
3) Why weren't the women who did the spraying/holding injured by their own attack?
Wnt (talk) 13:50, 17 February 2017 (UTC)
It was widely reported that this incident led to a falling-out between Kim Jong Nam and his father, but these oft-repeated claims are based on hearsay. After all, this was not his first trip to Japan under an assumed name with a fake passport. Members of the Kim family at the time frequently used fake identities when traveling overseas, so the scheme would hardly have raised the ire of the ruling Kim.[1]
References
should the page be semi-protected? this page is subject to vandalism,editorial bias, and is being edited a lot ever since it came out.L.S. inc. (talk) 14:47, 17 February 2017 (UTC)
The section on his death (current version) is being expanded seemingly minute by minute with every piece of speculative and trivial passing detail that's being reported. Much of it is also in garbled English and reliant on some fairly ropey media sources. That could be copyedited, but I'm not sure it needs to be here at all and I'm tempted to cut whole chunks of it out. As noted above, WP is not a rolling news aggregator: all that is needed at any point in time is a clear summary of the latest, confirmed state of play, relying on the most up-to-date sources. And when that changes, superseded content and sources can and should go. N-HH talk/edits 10:37, 19 February 2017 (UTC)
Currently the article says this:
In May 2001, Kim was arrested in Japan on arrival at Narita International Airport, accompanied by two women and a four-year-old boy identified as his son. He was traveling on a forged Dominican Republic passport using a Chinese alias, Pang Xiong, which could mean "fat bear" in Mandarin Chinese. After being detained he was deported to China, where he said he was traveling to Japan to visit Tokyo Disneyland. The incident caused his father to cancel a planned visit to China due to the embarrassment it caused him.
It doesn't say what he was arrested for. One could guess that it was because the passport was forged, but that's just a guess; it doesn't say that. Is anything known about that? Michael Hardy (talk) 02:30, 20 February 2017 (UTC)
According to this [8], the ambassador was not recalled.--Jack Upland (talk) 09:20, 20 February 2017 (UTC)
Anybody want to start working on what kind of poison fits the observed effects? So far no lab reports coming out of autopsy yet. Erxnmedia (talk) 20:02, 22 February 2017 (UTC)
The article about his death, and the aftermath, should perhaps become its own article, as it is becoming longer and longer every day. While I assume that currently, most visitor want to know how he has died exactly, in the future perhaps it may be better to split the article into separate ones due to its growing length. 2A02:8388:1641:4700:BE5F:F4FF:FECD:7CB2 (talk) 20:39, 23 February 2017 (UTC)
The last annotation is marked with a Greek letter, even though it's a source. Shouldn't it be switched to an Arabic number?--Adûnâi (talk) 12:32, 24 February 2017 (UTC)
I'm surprised by the lack of forensic evidence. The attackers must have disposed of various items (such as the poison container, cloths and possibly rubber gloves) after the attack. Was there a search of litter bins in the area? I have not seen any reports of this. Roberttherambler (talk) 18:48, 25 February 2017 (UTC)
Is this confirmed or is it a rumour? Does someone have access to the book by Bradley Martin which is cited?--Jack Upland (talk) 20:32, 26 February 2017 (UTC)
Shukan Schincho, one of Japan's popular weeklies, eventually reported that the young North Korean had become a familiar figure at a Korean nightclub in the Akasaka entertainment district and at a bathhouse in Yoshiwara, a red light district in the Japanese capital. A boathouse attendant, described as "curvaceous", was quoted as saying he had visited her before his ill-fated May 2001 trip. When his picture appeared in the news media, she sad, she recognized him as a enthusiastic customer. "He visited the shop and asked for me three days in a row," the woman said.
I have taken it out. Between the suspect sourcing and the weasily wording ("reportedly" without saying who reported it), and the absence of context (did this contribute to his falling out with his brother? we don't know), plus the BLP issues, I think we can do without it. If this does go back in, let's at least attribute this to Shukan Shincho, as we don't seem to have any other reports from more reliable sources. Kendall-K1 (talk) 23:11, 28 February 2017 (UTC)
Today the autopsy said the doctors still have not identified the dead person. Moreover, hi country says that the dead person was Kim Chol. -- Magioladitis (talk) 22:39, 3 March 2017 (UTC)
DNA test still pending. -- Magioladitis (talk) 12:47, 4 March 2017 (UTC)
The most reliable source are the doctors. Since the press release says that DNA test is pending we can't declare a person dead. -- Magioladitis (talk) 16:53, 4 March 2017 (UTC)
This is the press release of the autopsy: [19]. The identification of the body is still pending. See 2:57 and on. -- Magioladitis (talk) 20:17, 4 March 2017 (UTC)
The difference is that even the police and the doctors have not 100% confirmed the identify of the victim wile they make efforts to. Newspapers jump to conclusions to increase viewership. There is a difference between wikinews and Wikipedia. Wikipedia can delay the stream of info to ensure accuracy. I had the same concerns with the death fo Michael Jackson and other that were dying but not still dead but the news were already reporting the death. Sometimes, the news and consequentially Wikipedia reported a person as dead before they actually die. This has to stop. Wikipedia should respect human life. -- Magioladitis (talk) 19:37, 5 March 2017 (UTC)
http://www.freemalaysiatoday.com/category/nation/2017/03/06/accuseds-lawyer-wants-new-autopsy-on-jong-nam/ Third autopsy requested]. -- Magioladitis (talk) 09:17, 6 March 2017 (UTC)
http://www.thestar.com.my/news/nation/2017/03/06/dna-sample-needed/ “Who does the body belong to? We need DNA samples to identify it,” he told reporters outside the Parliament lobby on Monday.]. -- Magioladitis (talk) 09:18, 6 March 2017 (UTC)
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ko.wikipedia.org/factcheck[edit]Repost from the Alexander Litvinenko article, which does bear deep similarities (assassinations seemingly authorized or overseen by tyrants worthy thereby, arguably, in the Journal of Asylum, Refugees, and Assassination (JARA), of assassination), and the post ends on the same preventive cross-lingual factcheck treatment for the Kim Jong-nam Article. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Adamtheclayman (talk • contribs) 12:22, 5 March 2017 (UTC) ru.wikipedia.org/factcheck / ko.wikipedia.org/factcheck[edit]Hi Wikipedia, About a month or two ago, I visited the Russkiy yazik (Russian) Langauge version of Wikipedia and found some deliberately misleading, false, fraudulent, and defamatory statements there about Alexander Litvinenko ru.wikipedia.org/factcheck (Russian: Алекса́ндр Ва́льтерович Литвине́нко, IPA: [ɐlʲɪˈksandr ˈvaltərəvʲɪtɕ lʲɪtvʲɪˈnʲɛnkə]. It practically looked like it was written by the FSB, and had _very little similarity_ to the English Wikipedia Treatment of the Subject. For instance, there was a statement, maybe well coerced, above the fold by Litvinenko's 'father' saying that Litvinenko was an embarrassment, and there was a whole lot of invalid uncertainty and disinformation about the mechanism of death and the traceability of the death back to the Inquiry's identified culprits, and the involvement of Vladimir Putin. Of course, ru.wikipedia.org is under pressure itself. Authors in Russia can get killed for editing Litvinenko article, like the dozens of journalists now who have disappeared or been killed in mysterious circumstances. But I can't keep monitoring this for neutral point-of-view myself, and i'm past the limit of machine translation: there are natural langauge 'tricks' of bias that I can't catch, in the interstices of machine translation capability on Translate. So, what I'm proposing, and what I've done here, is include a link at the very top to "ru.wikipedia.org/factcheck", which redirects bilingual volunteers (RU>EN + EN>RU) to that page to fact-check Wikipedia across Langauges. The Neutral Point of View on Litvinenko, following the exhaustive UK Litvinenko Inquiry, should not be any different on the basic facts, and any divergence should be subject to questioning, if the ru.wikipedia.org seems to be deliberatively misinforming Russian Langauge Readers. This link is syntax-positioned just before the deep name, in local endonym, of the Notable Person or Event. This Litvinenko cross-link model might serve as a template for other cases. Let me know if you have any suggestions for the syntax. The ideal thing would be to link at the name itself, but that's proven difficult, given the existing display code. This Litvinenko scandal, more than any other, that has traction in a popular, more neutral reconsideration of Putin's Plutonium + Polonium Reign. Who has access to Polonium, aside from the authority chain of centralized state control, and how could this have been done, and remain unprosecuted locally, without authorization and protection at the highest level, extending to a ru.wikipedia.org Disinformation Campaign? So please, to keep this from repeating again, if you would, please consider supporting this syntax for cross-lingual factchecking in versions of Wikipedia that proliferate through the world, and may be subject to Governmental disinformation campaigns. Certain articles, like the Litvinenko Article, show Revision HSTRY that is indubitably driven by politics, not facts. Another that merits close fact-checking attention right now would be the assassination of Kim Jong-Un's older, regime-critical brother, Kim Jong-nam ko.wikipedia.org/factcheck, without any JARA (Journal on Asylum, Refugees, and Assassination) 007 License. North Korea is claiming that the death was a heart clot (in vulgar English, a heart attack). We know from Indonesia that's disinformation, and it's so inculpatory to disinform the Public about this that Kim Jong-Un might be subject now, if not before, to a JARA 007 Recommendation. It's hard to mistake VX Nerve Gas for a Heart Clot in a toxicology report. Unless, perhaps, Wikipedia means to claim that these are ambiguous in toxicology testing, or that there's a conspiracy in Indonesian Toxicology Labs to bring down Kim Jong-Un. ko.wikipedia.org might not penetrate into Hermit Kingdom, and might be written almost entirely by the Republic of Korea, but it's still worth a factcheck link, while cross-lingual accounts might diverge, so that bilinguals can participate in either langauge contesting Neutral Point-of-View with Facts, as they come in. — Preceding unsigned comment added by Adamtheclayman (talk • contribs) 17:06, 5 March 2017 (UTC) 17:22, 5 March 2017 (UTC) Why is the ko.wikipedia.org version missing a summary above the fold recognizing the notably spectacular nature of this death?[edit]Ok, if you want to experience a totalitarian disinformation campaign, machine translate this, and if it looks ok for a moment, go back into the Page HSTRY: https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EA%B9%80%EC%A0%95%EB%82%A8_(1971%EB%85%84) Using Google Translate, there are _massive_ structural differences in the treatment of Kim Jong-nam in ko.wikipedia.org compared to en.wikipedia.org. Relying on automated translation, we have _just this_ on ko.wikipedia.org, as of about 02017年03月05日 17:35 AM UTC: Gimjeongnam (men's things金正, 1971 year 5 month 10 one - 2017 Mon 213 days ) is the Democratic People's Republic of Korea Kim Jong Il's eldest son Jong前and chief leader of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea Kim Jong-un is the half-brother.
Kim Jong-nam ko.wikipedia.org/factcheck (Chosŏn'gŭl: 김정남; Hancha: 金正男, Korean pronunciation: [kim.dʑʌŋ.nam] or [kim] [tɕʌŋ.nam]; 10 May 1971 – 13 February 2017) was the eldest son of Kim Jong-il, leader of North Korea. From roughly 1994 to 2001, he was considered the heir apparent to his father.[3] Following a series of actions showing dissent to the North Korean regime, including a failed attempt to visit Tokyo Disneyland in May 2001 by entering Japan with a false passport, he was thought to have fallen out of favour with his father.[4] Kim was exiled from North Korea c. 2003, becoming an occasional critic of his family's regime and an advocate for reform.[5] His younger paternal half-brother, Kim Jong-un, was named heir apparent in September 2010.[6] Kim's death in Malaysia in February 2017 is claimed to be the result of poisoning at Kuala Lumpur International Airport. What? Why would these be so different? Why does the ko.wikipedia.org summary think it adequate to say, "Kim Jong-nam (age) is the DRPK's Last Leader's eldest son and chief leader of the DPRK Kim Jong-un is the half-brother." No explicit mention of period of time 01994 - 02001 of being heir apparent. No mention of being a conscientious dissenter and regime critic. No mention of exile (or cause). No mention of change of heir apparent o Kim Jong-un. Most remarkably of all, no mention of poisoning. Why is ko.wikipedia.org lagging behind the rest of the world by three weeks above the fold? And what in the world is this ______ utter lack of concern for truth, mixed with ulterior motive and agenda: "At around 9 am on February 13, 2017, Kim Jung- nam died shortly after rubbing her face with two women buried in their bare hands at the Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Span , Malaysia . There is also a theory that he died from botulinum [9] , and that he died after being sprayed with poison. [10] Kim Jong-nam's assassination was carried out in early 2012, the year following Kim Jong Eun's succession in 2011, the National Intelligence Service said. The National Intelligence Service also revealed in April 2012 that Kim Jong-nam sent a letter to Chairman Kim Jong-un to ask him to live. [11] It is also said that some have died from the poisoning ." In ko.wikipedia.org, Kim Jong-nam died in early 02012? What? And Kim Jong-nam sent a letter to Chairman Kim Jong-un asking him to let Kim Jong-nam live? It's like the Hermit Kingdom is using its own Calendaring system, and living in its own alternate reality. The first is true.. they do have their own Calendaring system, and if you ask me, some of the naming on that calendar is really cool, if depraved and depriving. The second, the living in alternate reality, is not so much; not so true. They live in the same reality we do. I think Wikipedias can agree to that wherever we're living at the moment. Basically, if you have already read ko.wikipedia.org in the first waves of publicity, even if you later hear or read something convincing that Kim Jong-nam was assassinated that penetrates through into the Hermit Kingdom, you won't blame it on Kim Jong-un, because it happened 5 years ago in 02012, before Kim Jong-un was even in power, and Kim Jong-un protested in a heartfelt letter to their father. We know that's true! It was on wikipedia.. i don't know, i think i read it back when this fake propaganda crisis started crossing our borders. They're always after our Dear Leader. Keep running this through human and machine translation. Let's work on some moral reaccounting standards on wikipedia's subdivides, as if these were financial statements in each langauge block that have to be audited, as factional profit and loss statements that have to be cross-checked for neutrality in spectacular cases, at least, in environments known to operate without a free media and with governnmental interference in media, like Russia, of course, where most journalists who go critical live in fear of being turned into an example: https://ko.wikipedia.org/wiki/%EA%B9%80%EC%A0%95%EB%82%A8_(1971%EB%85%84) Adam D. Clayman (talk) 17:47, 5 March 2017 (UTC) What's the danger of Authoritarian Wikipedia?[edit]Here's what an Authoritarian in an off-center langauge can do. They can keep Wikipedia factual and reliable on so many matters that langauge block speakers come to rely upon Wikipedia as a first, even final, source of authority, but then, when an opportune moment presents, on a knotty problem for their Authoritarian faction, they can jump on Wikipedia with 3 fake accounts, then another 3 fake accounts, then another 3 fake accounts, simulating real user behavior (if they're sophisticated), making it look like there's just a series of authentic confusions or even, as with Litvinenko and Jong-nam, sincere, specific counteracting reliable information that grants this Authoritarian faction immunity and privilege when it matters most. So, the Authoritarian in a slightly off-center regional langauge, or a Langauge that's global, center, and central to hectomillions but contained heavily within an Authoritarian-controlled media block (see: Росси́я) can be "captured" selectively by Authoritarian Editorial controls, to 'launder' narratives, stories, mythic and fundamentally cynical (selfish, self-interested) information that favors the Authoritarian regime. The Litvinenko article was way off base, probably for years. This Jong-nam article might be off for another day or two, before Wikipedia can pull it back into Neutral, and subside the fake accounts. The syntax for crosslingual factcheck is important. It helps assure that Wikipedia isn't being selectively compromised by Authoritarian Disinformation Campaigns. Either you have Wikipedia, or you don't. If you don't, you know you're in a filter bubble controlled by your Government. Someone much more technically sophisticated than me will want to figure out how to monitor for "coverage holes" in the access logs indicating domestic spoofing. If i were the FSB, and i wanted to respond to the Litvinenko article coming uncomfortably close to true, I would start serving a version of the article at some fraction of the access logs, to make cheating harder to detect, or in full. The access statistics should be teling if anyone attempts that on a high-priority cross-lingual check, and there are few problems more important for remaining in Conscience across billions of lives than this: being able to draw upon the same (or a very, very similar) neutral point-of-view on the CORE Facts of a case. Another example is the contentious treatment of the Nakba and the Israeli Independence War, which have been and may well be presented differently, on different pages, for a while more. But they really should be a joint page: "Nakba - Independence War", or "Independence War - Nakba", one day, before this Peace finally closes. It would help close the conscience gaps that are holding back peace in that section of the Middle East. You could randomize the order of presentation of (Independence War, Nakba), but the CORE Facts and Map Bias Presentation Orders must be the same, or side-by-side more realistically, to keep everyone in tune of the same basic layers of conscience on fact. It's indisputable that Israel justly considers this their day of Independence, and that no other State lists their dirty laundry prominently in their Independence Day Articles. But it's also true that Palestinians consider the Independence War a Disaster for their families, over generations of nonabsorption into lands they thought they'd be welcomed within. It's also a helpful step in the closure of and regulation of two-state conscience, now that the Palestinian Refugee Population has exploded (HSTRY assymetrically) for lack of absorption by neighboring states. I think that's pretty fair and neutral, and honestly, all Independence Movements have dirty laundry they are hiding, and I don't except any of my own, where i'm eligible for Citizenship: States United, España, Portugal, المغرب al-Maghreb, and Yisrael. This isn't moral relativism: there are vast differences, per tribe culture and per each tribe's and nation's or nation of nations' capita, that are measurable in life, death, disease, landlessness, and varieties of real enslavement in each of these Cases. I just checked the 01948 Palestine War Article, and it's much improved from how i last remember it. It's a different problem to handle this intralingually than interlingually, and i now i have more reason to trust and believe that the en.wikipedia.org has gotten good at intralingual crosschecks on HSTRY. On quick inspection, it looks like a simplex, good, and true Joint HSTRY Peace. It wasn't like this years ago: the stories were separated rather than brought into a neutral POV of one major story that branches into more than one, and far more than two sides of two sides. I'm just curious about why there isn't a link attached above the fold to make the connected coverage (Nakba, Independence War) more accessible. They names are presented in static print, in bold, but not 'hot-jumpable'. But editorially, i can accept either stance, as each has merits and is understandable, and if anyone wants to learn more about one or more strands, getting deep into the word-cloud separations, it's not inaccessible, or being hidden, like some of these Authoritarian 'world clouds' based on abused word clouding. I don't think in my childhood I learned the word Nakba until I graduated College, and I spent time when I was young speaking to Church Audiences about the 01948 Palestinian War. It's not that I didn't look: I went hunting for everything I could find by Palestinian HSTRYans, and did everything I could to find the central truths, but I still couldn't find the word 'Nakba' and extensive resources on the Nakba in 02001 - 02003, and now the endonym for the 01948 Palestine War is thankfully very prominently available. It wasn't out of Authoritarianism either: it was just inaccessible, and i'm not entirely sure, without further study, if that was any identifiable person's fault, but rather just an Epic System fail. I wasn't an inattentive student, either. I was looking and listening, and i never learned the word Nakba. The format in 01948 Palestine War seems to do the job for stabilized intralinguals, but if there could be a fact-check driver that includes link-outs for intralingual 'unreasonable doubt'- and conviction-checking, that would be helpful. Some of these divergences undermine matters that are approaching the Social Verdict level, and if one community believes one conviction, and another community has a completely incompatible verdict, and these stances are just within range of accessibility upregulation of cross-checking, maybe there should be a routine syntax for that. If there is already, and i have no doubt there must be something, i'd love to learn about how it's done. I don't even know how to search for crosschecking. But now that i have searched for cross-checking, i found this analogous Chess article, about endgames generally involving two Queens. There are a large number of Queen communities out there that are falling short on Century Assuring/Altaring Life Movement Unity, i.e. Calmunity. Cross-checking could help these Queen Calmunities reach their real Joint Endgame, measurable in Century Assurances, with no breach in the Covenants Assuring Life Motion: |
I've removed this about the two female suspecs:
This tells us nothing. It is not remarkable that they have lawyers. And most countries do not allow lawyers from other jurisdictions to practice there. In the USA, lawyers need to be admitted to the bar in that particular state.--Jack Upland (talk) 05:48, 6 March 2017 (UTC)
References
I think we should leave ARNKA out. The problem isn't sourcing, it's relevance. Kendall-K1 (talk) 14:23, 6 March 2017 (UTC)
I agree. -- Magioladitis (talk) 14:33, 6 March 2017 (UTC)
@Drieakko and Magioladitis: Please stop edit warring over the cause of death. My own opinion is that we should not list a cause in the infobox until we have a reliable source. Right now I don't see one. The citation in the infobox doesn't say his death was due to VX poisoning; it says the Malaysian police say it was due to VX poisoning. Kendall-K1 (talk) 15:26, 7 March 2017 (UTC)
OK I agree. -- Magioladitis (talk) 15:32, 7 March 2017 (UTC)
We have a source that says his birth date is "May 10, 1971 — not on June 10, 1970, as the passport he was carrying when he died stated." The passport is obviously fake since it has a different name on it. But even if it were legit, it's a primary source and not as acceptable as the Washington Post. If we can find a reliable source that says June 10, 1970 we can include that but we would have to give both dates per NPOV.
Also, the citation for birth date belongs in the Early life section, not in the infobox or lead. Kendall-K1 (talk) 12:47, 10 March 2017 (UTC)
"We have looked into the possibility that he travelled using a fake passport. I think he has two different identities. Probably this is an undercover document. But it is an authentic passport," he told a press conference here."[22] 59.152.244.169 (talk) —Preceding undated comment added 07:56, 13 March 2017 (UTC)
From the lead:
The cited source does not say the visit to Disneyland was viewed as dissent. Is there any source that does? In fact, North Korea likes Disney and gives a Mickey Mouse backpack to every schoolkid.--Jack Upland (talk) 10:30, 23 April 2017 (UTC)
On a related matter, in the "Loss of favour" section we've got this: "It is believed that Kim Jong-un, Jong-nam's youngest half-brother, became the new heir apparent due to this incident." What incident? The NYT story given as a source does not talk about either the Disney incident or the Ko Young-hee incident that is mentioned in the previous paragraph. It doesn't seem to say anything about why there was a shift from Jong-nam to Jong-un as heir apparent, only about how that shift was being implemented. Kendall-K1 (talk) 17:08, 16 July 2017 (UTC)
The autopsy is part of the investigation, so it doesn't make sense to separate them. The release of suspects is both part of the investigation and part of the dispute. And it is confusing to have events recounted out of chronological order.--Jack Upland (talk) 02:29, 26 April 2017 (UTC)
Following the reworking of the "Death" section, I'm not sure what to do with "South Korean response". As it is basically rhetoric, I'm inclined to remove it. It would be different if South Korea had taken concrete steps in response.--Jack Upland (talk) 04:00, 11 May 2017 (UTC)
There are several loose ends with the text as it stands.
@Kendall-K1: removed the following information from the Assassination section:
Kim arrived in Malaysia on February 6, 2017, traveling to the resort island of Langkawi on February 8.[1] On February 9 he met with an unidentified American national, reported by the Asahi Shimbun to be an intelligence officer.[2][1]
References
In his cross examination, he grilled Mr Azirul about Kim's Langkawi meeting with a Korean-American man based in Bangkok, which was first reported by Japan's Asahi Shimbun last year. While Mr Azirul confirmed that the meeting took place at a hotel, he said the police have been unable to identify the man, who the Asahi said was a US intelligence officer.
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Personally, I'm partial to the earlier revision. To me, it looks rather abrupt to simply have the section begin with "On 13 February 2017, Kim died after being attacked by two women with VX nerve agent at Kuala Lumpur International Airport in Malaysia while traveling from Macau under a pseudonym.[39][40] ", with basically no context. And while I'm aware that it's an imperfect comparison, something like John_F._Kennedy#Assassination or Malcolm_X#Assassination both provided more information on the assassination in the main article, in addition to linking to the article dedicated to the assassinations themselves. I believe an extra sentence or two on KJN's time in Malaysia would not be unwarranted.
Agree/disagree? PvOberstein (talk) 06:05, 30 January 2018 (UTC)
At the end of the "personal life" section, this page states that he had "several tattoos, including two of dragons". Even though this is sourced, the source can't be accessed so I suspect that this is vandalism. Consider that. 2A00:23C7:5882:8201:4014:108F:A0D8:24A (talk) 16:19, 11 August 2023 (UTC)
There is a move discussion in progress on Talk:Kim Ju-ae which affects this page. Please participate on that page and not in this talk page section. Thank you. —RMCD bot 06:36, 26 February 2024 (UTC)