Los Angeles Times

Everyone’s invited to Kim Jong Un’s party – as workers

- By Julie Makinen

PYONGYANG, North Korea — There’s a buzz in the air in Pyongyang this week, a certain frisson that seems a combinatio­n of anticipati­on, tension and exhaustion. North Koreans are gearing up for something they haven’t seen in more than three decades — a Workers’ Party Congress, the highest- level political gathering in the reclusive one- party state.

Since January, Kim Jong Un’s government has been doing its utmost to set the stage: He’s tested a nuclear weapon, launched a satellite into low- Earth orbit and f ired off some missiles. Although many countries are aghast at the moves, even going so far as to pass new sanctions at the United Nations, in North Korea they’re portrayed as feats of strength.

When the congress opens Friday, they’ll be celebrated as great achievemen­ts, examples of how Kim has purportedl­y brought this impoverish­ed country of 24 million into some sort of parity with superpower­s such as the United States.

But one man cannot a party make, so Kim has been exhorting all citizens to take part in a “70- Day Speed Battle” to prepare for the event.

The drive kicked off in late February, and since then, across the capital, workers have been painting buildings in bright pastels and otherwise spiffing up their city. New propaganda

banners have sprung up across the spartan metropolis of 2.5 million.

“Let us strengthen our party’s might and f ighting strength!” exhorts one redand- green billboard. “Single- hearted unity!”

Clusters of red f lags with yellow communist sickles have appeared on street corners like bouquets. Brigades of gardeners are hastily planting real f lowers at major intersecti­ons.

The state- run newspaper Rodong Sinmun declared Wednesday that the “battle” had been an “absolute success.”

“Unceasing in the spirit of success, all workers are rushing like a storm to make the Seventh Party Congress the congress of victors and glory,” the paper claimed. The article further asserted that the 70- day battle had resulted in “the miraculous production” of an additional 160 million kilowatts of electricit­y, 360,000 tons of coal and 49,000 tons of cement.

Adults and schoolchil­dren have been ordered to participat­e in a variety of performanc­es. On Wednesday afternoon, scores of young men were huddled in a pedestrian underpass near the Arch of Triumph, whittling sticks apparently to be used in some sort of a candleligh­t procession; when a government minder caught a Western journalist taking photos of the scene, she ordered her away from the area, directing her gaze instead across the street, where teenage girls in white blouses and dark skirts practiced twirling red f lags.

In front of the Gwangbok department store, creaking streetcars stuffed to the gills disgorged a constant stream of women in traditiona­l Korean dresses and men in suits or military uniforms returning from rehearsals of some sort involving artificial f lowers.

The party congress will kick off at the April 25 House of Culture, a massive edifice adorned, like all major government buildings, with large portraits of founding father Kim Il Sung and his son and successor, Kim Jong

Il.

Such a confab has not been held since 1980, when Kim Il Sung was still at the helm. Kim Jong Il did not care much for such gatherings, doing away with many party formalitie­s and instead ruling through a small circle of aides while in power from 1994 to 2011.

But Kim Jong Un, who took over in December 2011 after the death of his father, Kim Jong Il, appears to be trying to govern more in the relatively ritualized style of his grandfathe­r, outside analysts say.

The party congress will gather delegates from across the country, and they are expected to bestow formal titles upon Kim and perhaps consider revisions to the party charter.

Some overseas observers say the event may also offer signals as to what economic policy changes the young leader may decide to pursue, including a possible re- introducti­on of a taxation system as the country adopts more market- style enterprise­s even as it pursues nu- clear weapons and missiles in defiance of U. N. resolution­s.

Exactly what will transpire when the curtain goes up Friday remains a closely guarded secret. But analysts outside the country expect it to be a formal coronation of sorts for Kim Jong Un, who has been consolidat­ing his rule for the last four years.

And if Kim has any plans for significan­t changes in North Korea, the party con- gress is when he would be expected to announce them.

Writing last fall on “38 North,” a website of the U. S.Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies, one North Korea expert said the congress would “be a good time for Kim Jong Un to lead his country on the path of gradual but real reform.”

“He could go down in history as the man who unleashed the vast economic potential of his country and turned it into the next East Asian dragon — the man who brought lasting peace to Korea and prosperity to his people,” wrote Ruediger Frank, the head of East Asian studies at the University of Vienna.

Perhaps that’s not what will happen. But as Kim has amply demonstrat­ed, he is a man who likes to keep things interestin­g.

 ?? Photog r aphs by Julie Makinen Los Angeles Times ?? ACROSS PYONGYANG, North Korean workers have been spiff ing up their city. New propaganda banners have sprung up across the spartan metropolis.
Photog r aphs by Julie Makinen Los Angeles Times ACROSS PYONGYANG, North Korean workers have been spiff ing up their city. New propaganda banners have sprung up across the spartan metropolis.
 ??  ?? NORTH KOREA has been exhorting all citizens to join the “70- Day Speed Battle” to prepare for the nation’s biggest political gathering in more than 30 years.
NORTH KOREA has been exhorting all citizens to join the “70- Day Speed Battle” to prepare for the nation’s biggest political gathering in more than 30 years.

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