N.Korea puts hazmat suits on parade for national day, but no missiles
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[September 09, 2021]
By Hyonhee Shin and Josh Smith
SEOUL (Reuters) -North Korea celebrated the
73rd anniversary of its foundation with a night-time military parade in
the capital, state media reported on Thursday, publishing photographs of
marching rows of personnel in orange hazmat suits but no ballistic
missiles.
Kim Jong Un, the leader of the reclusive state, attended the event as
paramilitary and public security forces of the Worker-Peasant Red
Guards, the country's largest civilian defence force, began marching in
Pyongyang's Kim Il Sung square at midnight on Wednesday, state media
showed.
Rodong Sinmun, the ruling Worker's Party's newspaper, published
photographs of people in orange hazmat suits with medical-grade masks in
an apparent symbol of anti-coronavirus efforts, and troops holding
rifles marching together.
Some conventional weapons were also on display, including multiple
rocket launchers and tractors carrying anti-tank missiles.
But no ballistic missiles were seen or mentioned in the reports, and Kim
did not deliver any speech, unlike last October when he boasted of the
country's nuclear capabilities and showcased previously unseen
intercontinental ballistic missiles during a pre-dawn military parade.
"The columns of emergency epidemic prevention and the Ministry of Public
Health were full of patriotic enthusiasm to display the advantages of
the socialist system all over the world, while firmly protecting the
security of the country and its people from the worldwide pandemic," the
KCNA said.
Though the marchers wore hazmat suits, none of the thousands of people
in the square were shown wearing protective face masks in the photos and
video distributed by state media.
State television broadcasts of the parade and other events showed Kim
closely surrounded by crowds of people touching him and shaking hands.
North Korea has not confirmed any COVID-19 cases but closed borders and
imposed strict prevention measures, seeing the pandemic as a matter of
national survival.
It was the first time since 2013 that North Korea had staged a parade
with the 5.7 million strong Worker-Peasant Red Guards, launched as
reserve forces after the exit of Chinese forces who fought for the North
in the 1950-53 Korean War.
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Personnel in orange hazmat suits march during a paramilitary parade
held to mark the 73rd founding anniversary of the republic at Kim Il
Sung square in Pyongyang in this undated image supplied by North
Korea's Korean Central News Agency on September 9, 2021. KCNA via
REUTERS
Yang Moo-jin, a professor at the University of North
Korean Studies in Seoul, said the perceived absence of strategic
weapons and the focus on public security forces showed Kim is
focused on domestic issues such as COVID-19 and the economy.
"The parade seems to be strictly designed as a domestic festival
aimed at promoting national unity and solidarity of the regime,"
Yang said.
"There were no nuclear weapons and Kim didn't give a message while
being there, which could be meant to keep the event low-key and
leave room for manoeuvre for future talks with the United States and
South Korea."
Talks aimed at persuading North Korea to give up its nuclear weapons
and ballistic missile arsenals have stalled since 2019.
U.S. President Joe Biden's administration has said it will explore
diplomacy to achieve North Korean denuclearisation, but has shown no
willingness to meet North Korean demands for an easing of sanctions.
A reactivation of inter-Korean hotlines in July raised hopes for a
restart of the denuclearisation talks. But the North stopped
answering the calls as South Korea and the United States held their
annual military exercises last month, which Pyongyang has warned
could trigger a security crisis.
(Reporting by Hyonhee Shin and Josh Smith in Seoul and David
Brunnstrom in Washington; Editing by Bernadette Baum, Peter Cooney,
Lincoln Feast and Timothy Heritage.)
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