Weekend Herald

North Koreans fly the flag

New song seen as a sign of Pyongyang’s propaganda push ahead of summit

- Eric Talmadge in Pyongyang

North Korea is stepping up a new loyalty campaign as leader Kim Jong Un prepares for his second summit with US President Donald Trump.

The campaign began last month with the introducti­on of a song in praise of the nation’s flag.

A video now being aired on staterun television to promote the song — called Our National Flag — shows repeated images of the flag being raised at internatio­nal sports competitio­ns and being formed by a sea of people holding up coloured lengths of cloth at a parade and rally on Kim Il Sung Square in Pyongyang. Other images show recent improvemen­ts in the economy and standard of living, a reflection of a current government policy shift that focuses on developmen­t and prosperity.

The video is a departure from the tone of the propaganda that dominated just two years ago, when tensions with Washington were escalating and the focus was on North Korea’s successful missile tests.

In 2017, the country’s most popular musical group, the all-female Moranbong Band, released The Song of the Hwasong Rocket to commemorat­e the successful launch of North Korea’s first interconti­nental ballistic missile. They also performed at concerts with big-screen images of the ICBM behind them.

The new video incorporat­es imagery from the most recent mass games event, which was staged last September to mark the country’s 70th anniversar­y. It briefly shows troops at attention during a military parade and fighter jets creating smoke trails in the national colours of blue, red and white. But it also is interspers­ed with shots of civilians marching at the same parade, clips of new high-rise apartments in the capital, Pyongyang, fireworks displays and rows of students in their school uniforms.

Lyrics to Our National Flag have been distribute­d widely. Large posters showing the flag and the lyrics are being displayed in factories.

The song opens with the lines:

As we watch our blue-red banner flying sky high, our hearts are bursting with the blood of patriotism.

We feel the breath of our nation as the flag strongly flaps in the wind.

The flag as important as life carries the fate of our people.

We will love the shining flag of our nation.

Please fly until the end of this world. A note above one poster seen by the Associated Press urged workers at the Kim Jong Suk Textile Factory in Pyongyang to study the song closely.

Coming after years of what had seemed to be deepening hostility, Kim’s outreach to Washington and his Chinese and South Korean neighbours presents a bit of a conundrum for North Korea’s propaganda chiefs.

Few details of Kim’s negotiatio­ns with Trump over the future of North Korea’s nuclear arsenal have been made public in the North.

The official media have instead focused on how Kim has been welcomed on the world stage and asserted that he is leading the way to defuse tensions on the Korean Peninsula.

But the nationalis­t call for unity and the less-militarist­ic message of the new video are in keeping with an effort in North Korea to dial back its public displays of overtly anti-US propaganda and redirect attention to Kim’s current priority of mobilising the entire country behind improving the economy.

Kim unveiled that shift in his New Year’s address last year, opening the door to a stunning series of summits with Chinese leader Xi Jinping, South Korean President Moon Jae In and, last June, with Trump in Singapore.

Kim has since made some big strides with Beijing and Seoul toward undercutti­ng support for the USbacked sanctions that have constraine­d his developmen­t plans.

Though little progress has been made on Washington’s main concern, denucleari­sation, Trump announced during his State of the Union address on Wednesday that he will meet Kim again in Vietnam on February 27 and 28.

 ??  ?? The video for Our National Flag is a departure from the tone of the propaganda songs and videos of the recent past.
The video for Our National Flag is a departure from the tone of the propaganda songs and videos of the recent past.

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