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  • They love their dear leader.

  • But it is an unrequited love - a love that is one-sided. Now reports are suggesting there

  • is more love lost surfacing than love won. So are the wheels starting to come off North

  • Korea's propaganda machine? There are signs...

  • North Korea has done plenty to define itself. The image created, of a military might, where

  • parades are numerous. Where inhabitants are in constant awe of their leader.

  • Where strong hands and tears are compulsory. All this provided, courtesy of North Korean

  • TV, controlled by the state, disseminating what it wants, when it wants, for its own gain.

  • There are a lot of things you can't mention if you live in North Korea, that is unless

  • you want something bad to happen to you.

  • Song Ju Kim fled his home country last year. He was imprisoned several times and saw famine.

  • Now in Britain, he reflects on what life was like.

  • The leader of North Korea Mr. Kim Jong-un is just over 30 years old. He's very scared

  • about his power so wants to bring back the old policy of killing anyone who's against

  • the regime, so he can shore up his own power.

  • Asked whether his friends back home will be scared.

  • The North Korean people are not interested in these power games. Kim Jong-un is now using

  • the media to show how he is in charge.

  • Getting a general consensus of feeling is difficult. The secretive, totalitarian state

  • is not in the habit of letting foreign journalists in. And when they do, questions remain unanswered.

  • Kim Jong-un, what message are you trying to send to the West?

  • The apparent execution of Kim Jong Un's uncle creating global headlines.

  • He believes that he is in control, but I believe also that whether or not he intended the signal,

  • that ordering North Koreans, who are now for the first time officially being told that

  • there were people at the top of the regime plotting against Kim Jong-un will draw the

  • conclusion that their regime is not as rock solid as he's been trying to make out.

  • North Koreans who crossed the border into China have spoken of their experiences. They're

  • not defectors or dissidents but ordinary working people. Who have become faceless voices, fearful

  • of the backlash if they become known. They talk of times when North Korea was "better"

  • and "life was more comfortable." Others apparently say "if you believe, you will just suffer."

  • They express shock at being able to shower at any time in China and access to constant electricity.

  • The world remains switched on and watching in amusement or in all seriousness. The United

  • Nations want North Korea to be taken to the International Criminal Court over human rights

  • abuses claims. Behind the mass parades lie western concerns over threats of nuclear activity

  • and diplomatic pressure to secure a deal. This defector says the clock is ticking when

  • it comes to change.

  • I definitely believe the North Korean regime will not last much longer.

  • How long? Well, the addage is only time will tell.

  • And who would be the winners? Whoever the North Korean government tells you.

They love their dear leader.

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