ID :
38419
Thu, 01/01/2009 - 14:03
Auther :

(5th LD) N. Korea vows to denuclearize, rebuild economy in New Year

(ATTN: ADDS statement from Seoul ministry, nuke detail in paras 5-9)
By Kim Hyun
SEOUL, Jan. 1 (Yonhap) -- North Korea said Thursday that it will rebuild its
ailing economy and aim for denuclearization in the New Year, in an apparent
signal of its willingness to start afresh with the United States.
In a joint newspaper editorial that summed up policy goals for 2009, Pyongyang
continued criticism of Seoul but made no hostile mention of Washington, just
three weeks before the inauguration of a new U.S. administration.
"The independent foreign policy of our Republic to denuclearize the Korean
Peninsula and defend the peace and security of Northeast Asia and the rest of the
world is demonstrating its validity more fully as the days go by," the editorial
jointly issued by the North's ruling party, army and youth military said.
Pyongyang sees the inauguration of U.S. President-elect Barack Obama on Jan. 20
as an opportunity to start afresh after eight years of largely sour relations
with the outgoing Bush administration.
Six-party talks aimed at denuclearizing North Korea are on hold until Obama takes
office. Washington removed Pyongyang from its terrorism blacklist as the talks
proceeded in 2008, but the latest round ended without progress in December.
In an apparent gesture to the U.S., the editorial said North Korea "will develop
relations with the countries friendly towards us."
It also eschewed Pyongyang's customary accusations of joint military exercises by
South Korea and the U.S.
"Different from joint editorials of previous years, it did not throw any
criticism against the United States while mentioning the realization of a
denuclearized Korean Peninsula," Seoul's Unification Ministry said in a
statement.
Pyongyang will continue to uphold its military-first policy, but this year's
statement showed an increased focus on the economy -- particularly on feeding its
people.
North Korea's harvest slightly increased in 2008, but the U.N. World Food Program
says nearly a quarter of its population of 23 million still needs outside food
aid.
"To relieve scarcity of food is a pressing problem," the editorial said. "We
should concentrate all efforts on hitting this year's target of grain production
with the extraordinary determination to solve food problems by our own efforts in
any circumstances."
South Korea gave no food and fertilizer aid in 2008, and the suspension will
likely continue in the new year due to damaged relations.
The North's ailing economy shrank 2.3 percent in 2007, following a 1.1 percent
fall a year earlier, according to South Korea's central bank. The global economic
downturn is expected to further drive down its export volume and aid from the
outside
Koh Yu-hwan, a North Korea specialist at Seoul's Dongguk University, expects
Pyongyang will try to improve international relations to get resources to rebuild
its frail industrial infrastructure.
"The most notable part this year is its commitment to the economy," he said, "In
the past, it talked a lot about leader Kim Jong-il and the military-first policy,
but here it seems to say the country will restore its national system through its
party and rebuild its economy."
The military-first policy, called "songun," was adopted by Kim in 1995, a year
after his father and the country's founder Kim Il-sung died at age 82. The
younger Kim's ascendancy marked the first-ever father-to-son power transfer in a
communist state.
Still, North Korea vowed its unwavering loyalty to leader Kim Jong-il. Rumors of
his ill health circulated as Kim went unseen in the public eye for more than 50
days until early October. Seoul and Washington officials believe Kim had a stroke
in August and is now recovering. Kim, who turns 67 in February, has not nominated
a successor.
"The glorious tradition of engraving an immortal heroic epic by dint of a
harmonious whole in which the leader believes in the people and the people trust
in and follow their leader absolutely should be inherited firmly," it said.
North Korea did not respond to the South's offer of dialogue. The editorial
blamed Seoul for being "steeped in pro-U.S. sycophancy and hostility towards
fellow countrymen."
Inter-Korean relations dipped to a record low during South Korean conservative
President Lee Myung-bak's first year in office. Pyongyang suspended dialogue, and
Seoul shipped no humanitarian aid to the impoverished North.
Unification Ministry spokesman Kim Ho-nyoun said South Korea will continue to
offer dialogue.
"The New Year message was the way we expected it," he said. "We call for a
conversion of inter-Korean relations. We will continue our efforts to resume
inter-Korean talks."
North Korea has issued a joint newspaper editorial on the New Year's day as its
policy blueprint since 1995. Some analysts say the message has less authority
than before. Until 1994, Kim Il-sung read the New Year message aloud on
television and radio.
hkim@yna.co.kr
(END)

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