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WHAT A LAUGH!

Now crackpot tyrant Kim Jong-un bans SARCASM saying ‘It’s all America’s fault’ after North Koreans ‘praise him ironically’

Crackdown on indirect criticism hidden behind humour, now classed as 'hostile actions'

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un

NORTH Korea's crackpot dictator Kim Jong-un has banned his people from using sarcasm in their everyday conversations in a fresh crackdown on criticism of his leadership.

Mass meetings organised by government officials have been used to issue a chilling warning that ironic statements "will not be forgiven".

 North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has banned the population from using sarcasm
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North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has banned the population from using sarcasmCredit: Reuters

Oppressed and starving workers have been told satire directed towards the regime or indirect criticism hidden behind humour will be seen as "hostile actions".

Among the phrases outlawed by Kim are 'This is all America's fault' - a jibe at the paranoid regime's obsession with blaming the USA for its own failings.

A source in the northern Jagang province near the Chinese border : "One state security official personally organised a meeting to alert local residents to potential 'hostile actions' by internal rebellious elements.

"The main point of the lecture was 'keep your mouths shut'."

The same message was delivered in a meeting held in neighbouring Yanggang province on August 28, a source there said.

The official leading the meeting warned those present against being "dragged into internal hostile behaviour".

The source added: "This habit of the central authorities of blaming the wrong country when a problem's cause obviously lies elsewhere has led citizens to mock the party."

Another blacklisted expression is "A fool who cannot see the outside world".

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Portly Kim has launched a crackdown on anyone directing irony at his regime

The phrase has been used widely by government workers in the capital Pyongyang who were surprised Kim Jong-un failed to appear at commemorations held in Russia and China to mark the end of the Second World War.

Expressions of public discontent with the brutal regime have become more common in the tightly controlled state this year.

Graffiti mocking production slogans appeared at a construction site in Pyongyang, while more scandalous graffiti personally attacking Kim has been seen in areas near China.


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