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24 April 2024

North Korea backs son after Kim Jong-II death

September 11, 2011 shows Kim Jong Un (C), son of North Korean leader Kim Jong II inspecting the Mokran Video Company in Pyongyang. North Korean supremo Kim Jong-II died on December 17, 2011 of a heart attack aged 69, state media announced on December 19, 2011 paving the way for a third generation of family leadership under his son Kim Jong-Un. (AFP PHOTO / HO / KCNA VIA KNS)

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By AFP

North Korea on Monday hailed Kim Jong-Il's young son as a "great successor" at the helm of the isolated country after the leader who built an atomic arsenal and presided over a devastating famine died.

On state television a tearful announcer delivered the news of Kim's demise at 69 from a heart attack, and the station aired footage of hysterical North Koreans, young and old alike, pounding the ground in displays of abject grief.

Pyongyang urged service personnel and citizens to rally behind Kim's youngest son Jong-Un, who is in his late 20s and was last year made a four-star general and given top ruling party posts despite having had no public profile.

It is the nuclear-armed pariah nation's second dynastic succession, and analysts said there would probably be little turbulence, at least for now, in the North, whose unpredictable behaviour has long destabilised the region.

"All party members, military men and the public should faithfully follow the leadership of comrade Kim Jong-Un and protect and further strengthen the unified front of the party, military and the public," said the black-clad television announcer.

The official Korea Central News Agency (KCNA) quoted officials and citizens pledging their allegiance to the Swiss-educated new leader.

It described him as "a prominent thinker-theoretician and peerlessly illustrious commander", thanks to whom "the DPRK is more strikingly displaying its dignity and might as an invincible military power".

South Korea put its military on emergency alert after the senior Kim's death was announced but urged its people to stay calm, and swiftly closed ranks with its close ally the United States.

Neighbouring China and Russia, both influential players in Pyongyang, sent their condolences and observers said Beijing would beef up its all-important patronage to prevent an implosion in the communist North.

There was wariness about where North Korea goes now under Kim Jong-Un, but Britain, France and Germany voiced tentative hope for a new dawn at the end of a tumultuous year that has seen regimes topple across the Middle East.

The "Dear Leader", according to KCNA, "passed away from a great mental and physical strain" at 8:30 am on Saturday (2330 GMT Friday) while travelling by train on one of his field trips.

It said Kim died of a "severe myocardial infarction along with a heart attack". He had suffered a stroke in August 2008 which triggered an acceleration in the succession plans.

Kim's funeral will be held on December 28 in Pyongyang but no foreign delegations will be invited, KCNA said. National mourning was declared until December 29.

North Korea's propaganda machine has rolled into action to build up the same personality cult for Jong-Un that surrounded his father and late grandfather Kim Il-Sung, the founder and "eternal leader" of North Korea who died in 1994.

"The North's top guys have already sorted out everything and the regime seems to be stable under the new leadership," said Paik Hak-Soon of Seoul's Sejong Institute.

"I don't expect any major turbulence or power struggle within the regime in the foreseeable future. The Kim Jong-Un era has already started."

Kim Jong-Il's only sister Kim Kyong-Hui and her husband Jang Song-Thaek, the country's unofficial number-two leader, are expected to act as the younger Kim's mentors and throw their weight behind the son's leadership.

Analysts stressed that North Korea was entering an uncertain period, although its senior figures were likely to stick closely together for now.

"The North Korean elite has a vested interest in maintaining the system and will assess Jong-Un's ability to protect its interests," said Bruce Klingner, a Northeast Asia expert at Washington's Heritage Foundation.

South Korea summoned a meeting of the National Security Council and President Lee Myung-Bak called an emergency cabinet meeting.

The Joint Chiefs of Staff said it had increased monitoring along the border along with US forces in the country but had detected no unusual activity.

North and South Korea have remained technically at war since their three-year conflict ended only in an armistice in 1953. The United States stations 28,500 troops in the South.

Lee and US President Barack Obama were quick to talk by telephone after Kim's death was announced at noon (0300 GMT), officials said.

A White House statement said: "The president reaffirmed the United States' strong commitment to the stability of the Korean peninsula and the security of our close ally, the Republic of Korea."

Japan, Korea's former colonial ruler, offered its condolences over the death but also called an emergency security meeting, while Britain said it could be a "turning point" and France hoped that North Koreans could now "find freedom".

The news shocked South Koreans and some expressed fears of renewed conflict.

"I'm worried there will be a war. I thought it wasn't true at first," said student Song Bo-Na, 22.

KCNA, quoting a statement from the national funeral committee headed by Jong-Un, said Kim Jong-Il's body would lie in state in Kumsusan palace where his own father's embalmed body is on display.

Kim took over after his father and founding president Kim Il-Sung died in 1994, coming to power with a reputation as a playboy who revelled in the high life.

But in the mid- to late-1990s he presided over a famine which killed hundreds of thousands of his people. Severe food shortages continue and the UN children's fund estimates one-third of children are stunted by malnutrition.

Kim still found the resources for a nuclear weapons programme which culminated in tests in October 2006 and May 2009. The country is believed to have a plutonium stockpile big enough for six to eight weapons.

Pyongyang test-fired two short-range missiles off its east coast on Monday, South Korea's Yonhap news agency said, but quoted an unnamed government official as saying it was unrelated to the announcement of Kim's death.

Such test launches are relatively common in the North, which has an arsenal of chemical and conventional weapons including thousands of short- and medium-range missiles.