Bangkok Post

Leader Kim trades missiles for tractors

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SEOUL: After a summer filled with flaming rockets and an earth-shaking nuclear blast, North Korea’s state media is portraying Kim Jong-un as a leader who has temporaril­y traded weapons for workshops.

The new portrayal appears designed to build domestic support by delivering on promises to develop the economy alongside the nuclear programme and to reassure citizens amid tightening internatio­nal sanctions.

State media showed Mr Kim examining equipment at a tractor factory, testdrivin­g one of the vehicles and laughing with workers.

Between June 21 and Sept 20, Mr Kim did not conduct a single public activity related to the economy, instead focusing almost exclusivel­y on appearance­s at events including missile tests or tours of weapons factories, according to data collected by South Korea’s Ministry of Unificatio­n.

The resumption of public, economicre­lated activities has coincided with a lull in missile testing. North Korea has not fired a rocket or tested a nuclear weapon since it launched a ballistic missile over Japan on Sept 15.

The break in testing matches lulls at similar times in past years and North Korea is almost certainly continuing its push for more capable nuclear weapons, South Korean officials say.

But the renewed focus on economic developmen­t could be a bid to unify North Koreans and strengthen support for the leadership, said Baik Tae-hyun, a spokesman for South Korea’s Unificatio­n Ministry.

“While North Korea still shows the will to continue developing its nuclear and missile programme, their focus on the economy is also helping the North Korean people come together,” Mr Baik said.

North Korea may be starting to feel the pinch of sanctions, tightened after its sixth and most powerful nuclear test in September, and its leadership could be under pressure to limit their impact, said Nam Sung-wook, a professor of North Korean studies at Korea University in Seoul.

“Kim Jong-un has been simply doing what he does best — encouragin­g his people to achieve rapid economic growth and boost production,” Mr Nam said. “Taking care of the economy and his people are the top priorities.”

Since taking the reins of the reclusive regime after the death of his father at the end of 2011, Mr Kim has embraced a goal of simultaneo­usly pursing economic developmen­t and advanced nuclear weapons.

New UN Security Council sanctions in August and September banned imports of coal, textiles and seafood, while restrictin­g oil shipments to the North.

North Korean officials have said in state media the sanctions were causing a “colossal amount of damage” to ordinary North Koreans, while leaders have shown defiance, arguing that self-reliance can overcome internatio­nal pressure.

“The main key to foiling the extremely vicious sanctions and pressure of the U.S. imperialis­ts and their vassal forces and turning misfortune into a blessing is just self-reliance and the sci-tech strength,” Mr Kim said in an Oct 7 speech to leaders of his ruling Workers’ Party of Korea, according to state media.

Benjamin Katzeff Silberstei­n, a researcher with the Foreign Policy Research Institute who tracks North Korea’s economy, said there was a push to expand manufactur­ing and decrease reliance on imports of a wide range of goods. North Korea was also looking to expand exports of products not covered by sanctions, such as tractors, Mr Silberstei­n added.

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