To mark 70 years, North Korea plans lavish celebration

Children carry flowers Thursday in Pyongyang in preparation for celebrations marking the 70th anniversary of North Korea Workers’ Party.
Children carry flowers Thursday in Pyongyang in preparation for celebrations marking the 70th anniversary of North Korea Workers’ Party.

PYONGYANG, North Korea -- With the international media, foreign guests and ethnic Koreans from around the region descending on their capital, North Koreans are being mobilized en masse to put the finishing touches on one of the few things their country wants the whole world to see -- a lavish celebration and military parade to mark the 70th anniversary of the nation's ruling party.

Masses of Pyongyang residents, many carrying bouquets of pink or red plastic flowers, gathered in public squares across the city Thursday to practice their roles in Saturday's grand show for the anniversary of the 1945 founding of the Workers' Party of Korea. The city also has undergone an extensive face-lift, with builders working around the clock to finish high-rise apartments, pave roads and even put in bicycle lanes.

The spectacle promises to be the most elaborate since leader Kim Jong Un assumed power after the death of his father, Kim Jong Il, in 2011.

Though officials have not publicly announced the schedule for Saturday's events, the day is expected to kick off with a military parade and mass rally on Kim Il Sung Square in the morning and climax with a torchlight parade and concert to be held on a special stage set up on the nearby Taedong River, which runs through the capital.

It's not known if Kim will speak publicly at any of the day's events, though he did give reporters a surprise, close-up photo opportunity two years ago when the country held a similarly elaborate celebration for the 60th anniversary of the armistice that halted the 1950-53 Korean War.

To make sure everyone taking part in the spectacle knows their part, students, work units and other groups have filled public plazas for weeks to hone their marching, flag-waving and slogan-shouting skills. On Thursday, crowds of students waving red flags and women in brightly colored traditional clothing could be seen in the area around the square. North Korean flags lined the streets.

Open source satellite imagery suggests military units are practicing on a mock-up of the square at an airstrip farther away from prying eyes. The U.S.-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies said that images taken Tuesday show hundreds of tents, trucks and armored vehicles at the site, and troops assembled in formation.

"We are very proud of the 70th anniversary of the foundation of our party, it's an honor for us, and with this anniversary we will demonstrate our invincible single-hearted unity," said Chang Yong Ho, a student who will be taking part.

North Korea's leadership often uses anniversaries to rally the nation behind the military or the party, while at the same time reinforcing the primacy of the leader himself. The particularly strong emphasis on making the party foundation anniversary this year a lavish fete is also seen by some foreign analysts as a sign that Kim Jong Un is trying to build up the party's standing relative to the military.

Though both institutions are strong, the power balance among various government organs in North Korea is a delicate one and maintaining that balance is a key to keeping Kim's leadership solid and unchallenged.

Giving some credence to that argument, North Korean officials have recently stressed the role of the party in improving the standard of living for the people and a rocket launch that some foreign analysts expected to happen before the anniversary now appears to be unlikely.

A Section on 10/09/2015

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