By Reuters
SINGAPORE - At the end of the second night of living in the same ritzy Singapore hotel as North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, a member of his security staff sat beside a Reuters reporter in the lobby and smiled.
FILE PHOTO: A North Korean cameraman reacts as he is chased by media outside St Regis hotel, ahead of the summit between the North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and U.S. President Donald Trump, in Singapore June 10, 2018. REUTERS/Tyrone Siu/File Photo/ MANILA BULLETIN
It was a fleeting moment of warmth from the throngs of Kim’s bodyguards, who stalked the St. Regis hotel day and night with an intense gaze, declining to make eye contact with hundreds of journalists, guests and bar patrons gathered to snap a quick peek of the reclusive leader.
Thinking she had a chance to find out more about Kim’s visit, Reuters reporter Fathin Ungku asked the smiling guard, “How are you doing?’”
The guard pushed out his hand, waved it in front of her face, and then, despite it being indoors and night time, produced a pair of sunglasses, cleaned them and put them on.
For six Reuters journalists covering Kim’s historic summit with U.S. President Donald Trump on Tuesday, home for the past three days was the cream-colored, marble floor lobby of the St. Regis, one of Singapore’s most luxurious hotels.
It is rare for any Western journalist to get anywhere near Kim, let alone stay in the same building.
North Korean security gather around a small screen at the St Regis hotel in Singapore to watch their leader Kim Jong Un meet U.S. President Donald Trump, June 12, 2018. Picture taken June 12, 2018. REUTERS/John Geddie
However, the Reuters reporters assembled at the St. Regis constantly found themselves under the watchful eyes of North Korean security guards, hotel staff and Singapore police, whose job it was to make sure that journalists did not get close to the North Korean leadership, especially Kim himself.
Photography was banned. The only exception was for about a dozen North Korean state media workers who traveled with Kim from Pyongyang. They were allowed to take pictures and work within the cordon.
A team of six Reuters journalists from Seoul, Hong Kong and Singapore bureaus took turns staking out the hotel during the duration of Kim’s stay, from dawn until close to midnight.
The reason for our obsessive monitoring is that Kim has hardly traveled outside the country since becoming North Korea’s leader in 2011. And the limited disclosure about his itinerary left him plenty of opportunity for surprise forays around the island state.
The Singapore trip was the longest he is thought to have taken in that time.