The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Tributes and pledges as North Korea marks Kim Il Sung’s birthday

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PYONGYANG: Tens of thousands of North Koreans turned out to pay tribute to their leaders yesterday, the most important day of the isolated, nuclear-armed country’s ritual calendar.

In the North April 15 is known as the Day of the Sun, the anniversar­y of the 1912 birth of the country’s founder Kim Il Sung, whose son Kim Jong Il succeeded him and grandson Kim Jong Un, the current leader, inherited power in turn.

North Koreans are taught from birth to revere the Kim family and the ceremonies surroundin­g such occasions are one of the ways in which authoritie­s reinforce loyalty. From early morning, a steady stream of citizens arrived at Mansu hill in Pyongyang, where giant bronze statues of the two elder Kims look out over the capital.

Platoons of soldiers, staff of work units, families, newlyweds and tourists all lined up before the images, advancing to place flowers at their base.

“Let us pay tribute to the great president Kim Il Sung and the great leader Kim Jong Il,” intoned an announcer half-hidden by floral baskets, and all bowed in unison, the troops saluting.

Retired colonel Ra Man Ok, 84, wiped tears from her eyes as she stood before the statues, took a few paces backwards still facing the images, and bowed an extra, second time.

“I want to pay tribute with my spirit to the great leaders because I am too old to repay their benevolenc­e with my labour,” she told AFP, wearing the uniform in which she had marched in a military parade decades ago.

“My motto is that everybody can realise their hopes only by following the leadership of our party through all trials and difficulti­es.” Ordinary North Koreans always express wholeheart­ed support for the authoritie­s when speaking to foreign media.

In pride of place before the statues, cordoned off with a chain, stood a giant floral tribute in the name of Kim Jong Un.

This year’s anniversar­y – which is also marked by other events including mass dances and a flower festival – comes days after Kim reinforced his already unshakeabl­e grip on power with a generation­al reshuffle at the Supreme People’s Assembly (SPA), the country’s rubber stamp legislatur­e.

The nonagenari­an head of the parliament Kim Yong Nam – who also acts as the North’s ceremonial head of state as Kim Il Sung officially remains Eternal President despite dying in 1994 – was replaced by Choe Ryong Hae, considered one of Kim Jong Un’s right-hand men. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? People walk away after paying their respects before the statues of late North Korean leaders Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il, as part of celebratio­ns marking the anniversar­y of the birth of Kim Il Sung, known as the ‘Day of the Sun’, on Mansu hill in Pyongyang.
— AFP photo People walk away after paying their respects before the statues of late North Korean leaders Kim Il Sung and Kim Jong Il, as part of celebratio­ns marking the anniversar­y of the birth of Kim Il Sung, known as the ‘Day of the Sun’, on Mansu hill in Pyongyang.

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