North Korea vows more rocket launches
SOUTH KOREA: Hundreds of thousands of North Koreans rallied Friday in
the freezing cold to celebrate the country's rocket launch, staging a
choreographed show of defiance under their youthful leader's “endless”
wisdom.
The enormous rally in central Pyongyang, shown on state television,
came two days after the launch of the three-stage rocket and just ahead
of the anniversary Monday of the death of new leader Kim Jong-Un's
father. The West fears the launch has taken the nuclear-armed state a
step closer to firing intercontinental ballistic missiles across the
planet, and it has provoked UN Security Council condemnation along with
calls for more sanctions.
Refuelling its criticism of Wednesday's launch, the US State
Department said Kim had the chance as new leader “to take his country
back into the 21st century” but instead was making the “wrong choices”.
Unbowed, North Korean state media said Kim, who is in his late 20s,
had personally signed off on the rocket launch and had declared his
regime's “unshakable stand” that the programme will continue. Kim
stressed the need “to launch satellites in the future... to develop the
country's science, technology and economy”, according to the North's
official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) as it gave new details of the
launch.
The “dear respected Marshal” visited mission control an hour before
the rocket took off on Wednesday morning and praised the “ardent loyalty
and patriotic devotion” of the technical team, KCNA said in the report
early Friday.
The report gave no reaction to the international opprobrium that has
been heaped on North Korea since the rocket went up, ostensibly to place
a research satellite in orbit, with even close ally China expressing its
“regrets”. But Friday's rally was an emphatic demonstration of organised
support for the Kim dynasty, as the massed ranks of civilians and
soldiers chanted their obeisance under giant portraits of Kim's father
and grandfather.
AFP |