Kim Jong's secret passport detected

Brazilian passports, which were used by North Korean leader Kim Jong and his father, in an effort to obtain travel permits from foreign embassies, have been first discovered. Scanned black and white his passport issued by Brazil Embassy in Prague in [...]
Brazilian passports, which were used by North Korean leader Kim Jong and his father, in an effort to obtain travel permits from foreign embassies, have been first discovered.
Scanned black and white his passport issued by Brazil's embassy in Prague in February 1996, true photos of then Korean leader Kim Jong-il and his son and descendants of Kim Jong confirmed the sources from “Reuters”.
By the time Kim was in Switzerland, he used a false identity as the son of the North Korean Embassy driver, where Joseph Piag in his Brazilian passport. The passport says he was born on February 1, 1983.
It is widely believed that the country's supreme leader was born on January 8th, in 1984 or 1983, reports “RT” Transmission Periscope.
The passport reportedly belonged to Kim Jong-il was launched for Ijong Tchoi. It ranks its native position as São Paulo and its birth date on April 4, 1940, although it was born on February 16, 1941.
Brazil's Foreign Ministry has launched an investigation into the origin of documents, which have been attributed to its Czech Embassy. Both passports are signed by an embassy official named Antonio J. M. de Souza e Silva./Periscopi/















