Houston Chronicle Sunday

N. Korea congress full of praise for Kim

- By Eric Talmadge

PYONGYANG, North Korea — Senior members of North Korea’s ruling regime took to the stage on Saturday to praise their party and leader Kim Jong Un at their biggest meeting in 36 years, a much-touted and tightly choreograp­hed event intended to demonstrat­e Kim is firmly in control despite his country’s deepening internatio­nal isolation over its nuclear weapons program.

In something like a formal coronation for Kim, the ruling Workers’ Party congress was also expected to officially elect him to its top post. Shown on state TV

According to the North’s state-run media, the agenda for the congress includes reviewing the work of the party’s Central Committee and Central Audit Commission, revising party rules, electing Kim to the top party post and installing a new central party leadership — though no major de- partures from the current lineup were expected.

Video of the proceeding­s broadcast on state television on the second day of the congress Saturday showed party officials reporting accomplish­ments in the military, science and economy as part of the first item on the agenda.

The decision to formally install — or, perhaps more accurately, reinstall — Kim at the top is a step along the lines of his late father and grandfathe­r, who both held the title of general secretary of the Workers’ Party, and would demonstrat­e the young leader is in full control and ready to begin a new era of his own. Pomp and ceremony

Kim is already head of the party, but with the title of first secretary. He could be re-elected to the same post or given an unspecifie­d new one. His father, Kim Jong Il, holds the posthumous title of “eternal general secretary” and his grandfathe­r, national founder Kim Il Sung, is “eternal president.”

Kim opened the lavish congress with a brief speech on Friday that singled out North Korea’s advances in developing nuclear weapons and rockets capable of putting satellites into orbit, as examples of the country’s progress in the face of internatio­nal criticism and tough sanctions that threaten to further stifle its struggling economy.

Along with being high political theater filled with pomp and ceremony, the gathering is a major milestone for the young North Korean leader, whowas not yet born when the previous congress was held in 1980. Kim called the congress a “historic” step in a struggle pitting the North against “all manner of threats and desperate challenges by the imperialis­ts” — meaning mostly the United States.

 ?? KRT via AP ?? This frame taken from North Korean television shows Kim Jong Un at the congress Saturday. He is expected to be officially elected to his party’s top post.
KRT via AP This frame taken from North Korean television shows Kim Jong Un at the congress Saturday. He is expected to be officially elected to his party’s top post.

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