Kim Jong Un's makes first public speech
Pyongyang - North Korea's new leader
addressed his nation and the world for the first time on Sunday, vowing to
place top priority on his impoverished nation's military, which promptly
unveiled a new long-range missile.The speech was the culmination of two weeks
of celebrations marking the centenary of the birth of his grandfather, national
founder Kim Il Sung - festivities that were marred by a failed launch on Friday
of a rocket that generated international condemnation and cost North Korea a
food aid-for-nuclear-freeze deal with Washington.Kim Jong Un's speech took
North Koreans gathered at Kim Il Sung Square and around televisions across the
country by surprise. His father, late leader Kim Jong Il, addressed the public
only once in his lifetime.Appearing calm and measured as he read the 20-minute
speech, Kim Jong Un covered a wide range of topics, from foreign policy to the
economy. His speech, and a military parade that followed, capped the carefully
choreographed festivities commemorating Kim Il Sung's birthday.It was the best
look yet the outside world has had of the young Kim, who is believed to be in
his late 20s.Punctuating Kim's message that the North will continue to pour
funds into its military, the parade culminated with the unveiling of a new
long-range missile, though it's not clear how powerful or significant the
addition to the North Korean arsenal it is. Some analysts suggested it might
have been a dummy designed to dupe outside observers.Although the rocket launch
on Friday was a huge, costly embarrassment for the new leadership, Kim's
address was seen by analysts as an expression of confidence by the young leader
and meant to show that he is firmly in control."Superiority in military
technology is no longer monopolised by imperialists, and the era of enemies
using atomic bombs to threaten and blackmail us is forever over," Kim
said.His message suggested no significant changes in national policy - the
"Military First" strategy has long been at the centre of North
Korea's decision-making process.But there was strong symbolism in the images of
the new leader addressing the country on state TV and then watching - and often
laughing and gesturing in relaxed conversation with senior officials - as the
cream of his nation's 1.2 million-strong military marched by.Outside analysts
have raised worries about how Kim, who has been seen but not publicly heard
since taking over after his father's December death, would govern a country
that has a nuclear weapons programme and has previously threatened Seoul and
Washington with war.At the celebration of Kim Il Sung, he appeared to clear his
first hurdle.The speech was a good "first impression for his people and
for the world," said Hajime Izumi, a North Korea expert at Japan's
Shizuoka University. "He demonstrated that he can speak in public fairly
well, and at this stage that in itself - more than what he actually said - is
important. I think we might be seeing him speak in public more often, and show
a different style than his father."Kim said he will strengthen North Korea's defences by placing the country's "first, second and third"
priorities on military might. But he said he is open to working with foreign
countries that do not have hostile policies toward his nation, and said he
would strive to reunify Korea.He also stressed the importance of national
unity, calling his country "Kim Il Sung's Korea" rather than North
Korea."That suggests to me that they want to let the country, and the
world, know that this is a 'new' country," said Han S Park, a University
of Georgia professor who works frequently with top US and North Korean
officials, after watching the events in Pyongyang.Despite his youth, Kim has
been groomed since his teens to step into this role, Park said, citing
conversations with North Koreans with knowledge of the leader's personal
history.Cha Myong Hui, a journalist with the government-run Minju Joson
newspaper, said she was struck by how much he resembles his father and
grandfather."I can tell you every person in my country cried when they
heard his voice," she said.The young leader said he will aggressively
pursue economic growth to improve people's daily lives. North Korea has suffered decades of economic hardship following a famine in the
mid-1990s and the loss of aid from the Soviet Union. Kim Jong Un's formal three-year
succession has coincided with a push to improve the economy by employing modern
technology.Kim made no direct mention of the rocket failure. But North Korea's state media made an extraordinary announcement hours after the
launch, saying that the attempt to send a satellite into space had flopped. It
still claims past launches succeeded, which international experts deny.Concerns
remain high that North Korea may now feel itself under pressure to make up for
the botched rocket launch with a nuclear test - as it did in 2006 and 2009.The
finale in Sunday's military parade added to the worries over North Korea's
military. But analysts in Japan and South Korea said further examination is
needed to determine whether it's a new intercontinental ballistic missile that
North Korea reportedly has been building.Narushige Michishita, a North Korea
military expert at Japan's National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies, said
the missile appeared to be new, but strongly resembled the rocket used on
Friday and also the long-range Taepodong-2, which North Korea first launched,
unsuccessfully, in 2006.He said it probably has three stages but did not appear
to be big enough to have the 15 000km range needed to effectively attack the
United States, which would be the goal of an ICBM for the North."I don't
think this is a serious ICBM," Michishita said. "Putting it on
display has a psychological impact, and that would have been greater if Friday's
launch had worked. But North Korea has a very bad record with long-range missiles. It think this is more a
propaganda ploy than a military advance."
Ex-dictator admits 'disappearances'
Buenos Aires - Former Argentine dictator Jorge Videla admitted for the first time in
a new book that "7 000 or 8 000 people" disappeared under his regime
between 1976 and 1981.Caferino Reato, author of the book called Final
Disposition, says Videla admitted the disappearances during 20 hours of
interviews in the federal military prison where he is held."Let's say
there were 7 000 or 8 000 people who had to die to win the war against
subversion," the book quotes Videla as saying.Sentenced to life in prison
for crimes against humanity, the former dictator, 86, also admitted he decided
on "the disappearance of the bodies to avoid provoking protests inside and
outside the country," according to the book by Reato, who is a journalist
and political scientist."Each disappearance must certainly be understood
as a way to hide, to conceal a death," Videla is quoted as saying in
excerpts published on the website of publisher Random House Mondadori.Videla
was the first president of the last Argentine dictatorship, which ran from 1976
to 1983.He said insurgents compelled him to take action that ended in their
disappearances and deaths."There was no other alternative," Videla
said. Military leaders "were in agreement that it was the price that must
be paid to win the war against subversion and we needed that it not be obvious
so society would not realise it. It was necessary to eliminate a large group of
people who could not be brought to justice nor shot either," he said.The
author drew the name of the book, Final Disposition, from a comment made
by Videla."Final Disposition" was the phrase used. They are two very
military words and they mean to take something out of service that is useless.
When, for example, you're talking about a piece of clothing that you no longer
use or is no good because it's worn out, it goes to final disposition."The
former general said that two months before the 24 March 24 1976 coup, military
leaders began drawing up lists of people they thought should be arrested
immediately after the overthrow of Isabel Peron, who was president from 1974 to
1976."There are no lists with the fate of the disappeared," Videla
said. "There might be partial lists, but they're messy."He added that
"from a strictly military point of view, we did not need the coup. It was
a mistake."Humanitarian organisations estimate that about 30 000 people
disappeared during the dictatorship, most of them in about 600 clandestine
detention centres.The Argentine government continues to prosecute some of the
accused human rights violators of the military dictatorship. There were 84 new
convictions in 2011 and 843 more trials are pending.
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