New York Post

Kim's a blowhard

Throws weight around in NoKo typhoon tour

- By HYUNG-JIN KIM

North Korean leader Kim Jong- un visited typhoon-stricken areas in the nation’s northeast, fired a top official there and promised to send 12,000 workers from Pyongyang for recovery efforts, state media reported Sunday.

It’s the latest in a series of highprofil­e visits by Kim and his deputies to areas hit by natural disasters in recent weeks. Some experts say Kim likely attempted to project an image of a leader looking after people’s livelihood­s as he seeks to bolster internal unity in the face of the COVID-19 pandemic and US-led sanctions.

The Korean Central News Agency said that Kim on Saturday visited South Hamgyong province, which was hit by Typhoon Maysak last week. It said Kim was briefed that the typhoon destroyed more than 1,000 houses and inundated public buildings and farmland in the coastal areas of South Hamgyong and in nearby North Hamgyong province.

KCNA didn’t report any deaths or injuries in the two provinces, but the country’s main Rodong Sinmun newspaper said Saturday that “dozens of casualties” were reported in Kangwon province, south of the Hamgyong provinces, and that officials in Kangwon would be “gravely punished” for failing to evacuate residents to safety.

Kim also convened a high-level policy meeting in Kangwon, where he “underscore­d the need to make the recovery campaign from damage an important political work and an occasion of consolidat­ing the single-minded unity,” KCNA said.

Kim said authoritie­s must issue “a general mobilizati­on order” to ensure the swift supply of materials for rehabilita­tion work, and urged members of the ruling Workers’ Party in the capital city of Pyongyang to take the lead.

In a separate open letter to party members in Pyongyang, Kim said the 12,000-strong divisions of the party “elite” will be sent to aid recovery in the Hamgyong provinces.

KCNA said Kim also dismissed Kim Song-il, chairman of the South Hamgyong Provincial Committee of the Workers’ Party.

Kim needs greater public support to deal with worsening economic pain caused by the sanctions imposed over his nuclear program, and by the coronaviru­s pandemic, which had forced him to seal off his country’s border with China, its biggest trading partner and economic pipeline.

North Korea has insisted it hasn’t found any virus cases, a claim widely disputed by foreign analysts.

Despite the pandemic, observers say Kim will likely hold a military parade and other national events next month to celebrate the 75th founding anniversar­y of the Workers’ Party in an effort to boost his family’s rule.

 ??  ?? Kim Jong-un meets with officials Saturday in hard-hit South Hamgyong province, where he fired the local chairman of the Workers’ Party. BLUSTERY:
Kim Jong-un meets with officials Saturday in hard-hit South Hamgyong province, where he fired the local chairman of the Workers’ Party. BLUSTERY:

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