MACAU (Reuters) - There are no signs of life behind the bay windows of the cream-coloured seaside villas on a secluded side of Macau, reportedly home these days to the eldest son of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il.
After news reports last week that Kim Jong-nam, 35, and his family had taken up residence in the former Portuguese enclave, and a Japanese newspaper published a photo of him, a media circus arrived and staked out this normally quiet compound.
