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HomeUncategorizedAmid outside pressure, North Korea sets date for rare convention

Amid outside pressure, North Korea sets date for rare convention

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Facing mounting international pressure over its nuclear and missile ambitions, North Korea has set a date for its biggest political convention in decades next week that is expected to bolster young dictator Kim Jong-un’s grip on power.

North Korea sets date for rare convention-AVThe ruling Workers’ Party, led by Kim, will open its 7th Congress in Pyongyang on May 6, the official Korean Central News Agency reported Wednesday.

It will be the first time the congress, the highest-level decision-making party organ, will be held since 1980, when Kim’s late father Kim Jong-il was awarded a slew of top jobs in a confirmation that he was in line to succeed his father, North Korea founder Kim Il-sung.

Since taking power upon the death of his father in late 2011, Kim Jong-un has been struggling to revive his country’s troubled economy and grapple with an international standoff over its nuclear and missile programs.

The crisis deepened earlier this year when North Korea conducted a fourth nuclear test and a long-range rocket launch, which led to the UN slapping its toughest sanctions on Pyongyang in 20 years. South Korea and the United States also made their ongoing springtime military drills the largest ever.

In response, Kim last month ordered tests of a nuclear warhead and ballistic missiles capable of carrying warheads. That sparked outside speculation that North Korea could perform a fifth nuclear test ahead of the political convention to burnish his image as a stronger leader fighting hard against foreign aggressions.

South Korean President Park Geun-hye said Tuesday that the North was believed to have completed preparations for a new atomic bomb test. Park warned that such a move would result in stronger sanctions and pressure that would speed up North Korea’s collapse.

The North’s state media did not say what would be discussed and decided on during the congress. A previous KCNA report said the North decided to hold the convention as the country was faced with “the heavy yet sacred task” of building a “thriving” nation.

South Korea’s spy service said Wednesday it expects Kim to use the congress to try to strengthen and prolong his authoritarian leadership. The National Intelligence Service said the convention would handle personnel reshuffles, review state projects and revise party regulations, according to lawmaker Lee Cheol Woo, who attended the private NIS briefing.

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