The Phnom Penh Post

North Korea marks founder’s birth with public procession but no military parade

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KIM Jong-un oversaw a huge public procession to celebrate the birthday of North Korea’s founding leader, state media images showed on Saturday, but the anniversar­y passed without an anticipate­d show of military strength.

Known as the Day of the Sun in the nuclear-armed country, the April 15 birthday of the late Kim Il-sung – grandfathe­r of current leader Kim Jong-un – is one of the most important dates in Pyongyang’s political calendar.

Analysts and South Korean and US officials had widely predicted a military parade or even a nuclear test, but the celebratio­ns Friday involved a civilian parade, synchronis­ed dancing and fireworks.

Photograph­s released by the staterun Korean Central News Agency showed thousands of colourfull­y dressed people marching through the capital’s Kim Il-sung Square as Kim looked on from a balcony.

“Columns of workers, peasant dancers and others marched past the square,” carrying banners and boards bearing socialist slogans, and a giant national flag, KCNA said.

Three generation­s of the Kim family have ruled the country since 1948.

Kim also visited the Kumsusan Palace of the Sun, where the bodies of Kim Il-sung and his son and successor Kim Jong-il lie in state.

Civilian, not military

There was a steady drumbeat of celebrator­y coverage in state media leading up to the day, including the opening of new apartment complexes, light festivals and floral tributes.

It was a calculated decision to highlight new apartments and citizens with smartphone­s taking pictures of flowers, said Leif-Eric Easley, associate professor of internatio­nal studies at Ewha Womans University in Seoul.

“The Kim regime needs more sources of national pride and legitimacy than military parades,” he said.

“So the public commemorat­ions around its founder’s birthday tried to portray an economy that is not only resilient but growing.”

The anniversar­y celebratio­ns came three weeks after North Korea staged its largest interconti­nental ballistic missile test ever – the first time Kim’s most powerful weapon had been fired at full range since 2017.

That test was the culminatio­n of a record-breaking blitz of sanctionsb­usting launches this year and signalled an end to a self-imposed moratorium on long-range and nuclear tests.

The absence of military activity on the holiday “does not represent a shift away from North Korea’s military build-up”, Easley added.

Satellite imagery has shown signs of new activity at a tunnel at the Punggyeri nuclear testing site, which North Korea said was demolished in 2018 ahead of a summit between Kim and then-US president Donald Trump.

South Korean officials have said Pyongyang could still stage a military parade or carry out a weapons test on or around April 25, the anniversar­y of the founding of the Korean People’s Army.

 ?? AFP ?? North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (centre) takes part in a photo session with participan­ts in the 2021 military parade in Pyongyang.
AFP North Korean leader Kim Jong-un (centre) takes part in a photo session with participan­ts in the 2021 military parade in Pyongyang.
 ?? AFP ?? A parade of ‘paramilita­ry and public security forces’ to celebrate the 73rd founding anniversar­y of North Korea in 2021 at Kim Il-sung Square in Pyongyang.
AFP A parade of ‘paramilita­ry and public security forces’ to celebrate the 73rd founding anniversar­y of North Korea in 2021 at Kim Il-sung Square in Pyongyang.

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