North Korean leader Kim Jong-un said the nation would not use nuclear weapons unless its sovereignty is infringed by others with nuclear arms, and set a five-year plan to boost the secretive state’s moribund economy, state media reported yesterday.
The North “will faithfully fulfill its obligation for non-proliferation and strive for the global denuclearization,” Kim said in a report to a rare congress of the ruling Workers’ Party that opened on Friday, the Korean Central News Agency (KNCA) reported.
Pyongyang was also willing to normalize ties with states that had been hostile toward it, Kim said.
PHOTO: REUTERS
Isolated North Korea has made similar statements in the past, although it has also frequently threatened to attack the US and South Korea, and has defied UN resolutions in its pursuit of nuclear weapons.
The first party congress in 36 years began amid anticipation by the South Korean government and experts that the young third-generation leader would use it to further consolidate power. Kim became leader in 2011 after his father’s sudden death.
North Korea’s economy is squeezed by UN sanctions that were tightened in March following its latest nuclear test, and Kim’s five-year plan to boost economic growth emphasized the need to improve North Korea’s electricity supply and develop domestic sources of energy, including nuclear power.
He laid out the blueprint in an address highlighting his Byongjin policy of jointly pushing forward economic development and nuclear armament.
Yesterday morning, foreign journalists were told to dress presentably and were brought to the People’s Palace of Culture, where dozens of black Mercedes-Benz sedans — with the 727 number plates reserved for top government officials, were parked.
However, after a one-hour wait in a lobby outside large wooden doors with frosted glass, the journalists were taken back to their hotel without having met any officials.
While the North Korean capital has been tidied-up as part of a 70-day campaign of intensified labor ahead of the congress, the 128 members of the foreign media invited to Pyongyang to cover the event had yet to be granted access to the proceedings.
State television broadcast Kim’s Saturday speech yesterday afternoon.
Secretive North Korea does not publish economic data, although South Korea’s central bank said last year that the North’s economy grew by 1 percent in 2014. The estimate did not include gray market economic activity that has grown steadily in recent years and created an expanding consumer class.
Kim’s economic plan spelled out areas of focus, including more mechanization of agriculture and automation of factories, and higher coal output, but gave few specific targets.
“[We must] solve the energy problem and place the basic industry section on the right track, and increase agricultural and light industry production to definitely improve lives of the people,” state media quoted Kim as saying.
While the plan was short on detail, Michael Madden, an expert on the North Korean leadership, said it was significant that Kim had set out an economic plan at all.
“In stark contrast to his father, he is publicly taking responsibility for the economy and development as the originator of the policy. His father never undertook that responsibility,” Madden said.
North Korea came under toughened new UN sanctions in March after its most recent nuclear test and the launch of a long-range rocket, which put an object into space orbit, in defiance of UN Security Council resolutions.
Since then, it has continued to engage in nuclear and missile development, and claimed that it had succeeded in miniaturizing a nuclear warhead and launching a submarine-based ballistic missile.
“As a responsible nuclear weapons state, our Republic will not use a nuclear weapon unless its sovereignty is encroached upon by any aggressive hostile forces with nukes,” KCNA quoted Kim as saying on the second day of the meeting on Saturday.
Kim, 33, also called for improved ties with South Korea by erasing misunderstanding and mistrust, although he has made similar proposals in the past that led to talks by government officials that made little progress.
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