» 12/17/2012
14:51
NORTH KOREA
Pyongyang in
the streets weeps for Kim Jong-il (and the failures of Kim
Jong-un)
The regime requires the Koreans
abroad "not to be seen in public" and to go to the embassy to bow to the funeral
altar of the late "Beloved Leader". A statue erected of the former dictator as
high as that of the father of the country, Kim Il-sung. A source: "The people
cry because they lack food and homes, not for the death of the old
man."
Seoul (AsiaNews) - Hundreds of thousands of people have paid tribute this
morning to the memory of Kim Jong-il, the "Beloved Leader" of North Korea who
died a year ago. After nine bows (the customary "kowtows" with which one pays
tribute to a deceased person), the crowd gathered in the central square in
Pyongyang wept openly and showed its desperation for the "death of the great
hero of the revolution." However, as pointed out by several sources, "those
present, and all North Koreans, cried also because of the failures of the
regime."
The mourning lasted 3 days. The government in Pyongyang has also imposed on
the North Koreans abroad "not to be seen in public" and to go instead to their
country's embassies "to cry with all the great Korean people." In Dandong,
China, the various merchants who come from Pyongyang have disappeared from the
streets; in all the embassies there has been erected a memorial altar for the
late dictator.
Instead, in the capital, a statue was erected of the "Beloved Leader" as high
as that of his father, Kim Il-sung: a way to emphasize the "equal contribution"
that the two have made to the "development" of the country. Making the
comparison was the President of Parliament, Kim Young-nam, who spoke in the
place of the new dictator Jong-un, "too emotional" to pronounce his speech.
Kim said "the whole life of Kim Jong-il has proven to be exceptional. His
superhuman energy and his enormous revolutionary spirit have held high the red
flag over our glorious nation, and his patriotic commitment have defended it
against the enormous threats that surround it." The reference is to the nuclear
missile program that Pyongyang continues to carry on despite the enormous cost
in economic, human, social and diplomatic terms.
The launch of the Unha-3, the "weather" missile that has successfully reached
the Earth's atmosphere, was celebrated as a success of the Kim family: every day
since its launch last week, "spontaneous" demonstrations have been held to
celebrate it. With the money spent to build and run it, the regime could have
bought 5.8 million tonnes of maize, enough to feed 20 million people for 19
months.
A source pointed out: "In addition to the death of Jong-il, North Korea also
commemorates a year since the new dictator has taken over. He had re-launched,
after his father's funeral, the slogan of his grandfather, "will we feed the
people with rice and meat soup". Well, in the past 12 months things have gotten
worse for everyone: even the military has little to eat, while the government's
ranks have been purged almost every month. That is why the North Koreans mourn,
not for the death of the old Kim." (JYL)
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