North Korea celebrates late Kim's birthday in new alpine city, with no military event
North Korea has celebrated the 80th birthday anniversary of leader Kim Jong Un's late father with a music concert and gun salutes in a refurbished holy city, but no missile launch or military parade, state media KCNA reported on Wednesday (Nov 16).
Kim attended a gathering of government, military and ruling
Workers' Party officials which took place on Tuesday in front of the statue of
Kim Jong Il in Samjiyon City to commemorate the anniversary, a major holiday
called the Day of the Shining Star in North Korea, KCNA said.
Dubbed the "holy land of revolution" by KCNA, the northern alpine town of Samjiyon is near the border with China and Mount Paektu, the holy mountain where Kim's family claims its roots.
However, it was rare that North Korea held such celebrations in the remote region.
The young leader has sought to transform the city into a massive economic hub, by building new apartments, hotels, a ski resort and commercial, cultural and medical facilities.
The project has been a key initiative to foster a
"self-reliant" economy amid sanctions over nuclear and missile
programmes, and Kim has made multiple visits touting it as a "socialist
utopia" and "epitome of modern civilisation".
Kim laid flowers at the statue during the meeting but KCNA did not release any of his remarks. Ri Il Hwan, a senior party official, gave a speech vowing to uphold the late strongman's mantra of self-reliance, KCNA reported.
"The meeting showed well the firm will and enthusiasm of the participants to ... build a people's paradise prospering with self-reliance on this land," KCNA said.
The celebrations also included gun salutes and a music performance, but no military events, as has been the case in the past.
A US think tank said last week that commercial satellite imagery showed possible preparations for a military parade which could display new missiles or other military advances.
North Korea conducted a record seven missile tests in January, and has warned it may resume testing intercontinental ballistic missiles or nuclear weapons for the first time since 2017 amid stalled denuclearisation talks with the United States.
Analysts have said Pyongyang could use key holidays,
including the upcoming 110th birthday anniversary on Apr 15 of Kim's late
grandfather and national founder, Kim Il Sung, to carry out a major weapons
test.
Those holidays come at a sensitive time as South Korea is set to hold a presidential election on Mar 9, with formal campaigns starting this week.
Outgoing President Moon Jae-in has warned a restart of North
Korea's nuclear weapon or long-range missile tests could "instantly"
send the peninsula back into crisis.
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