North Korean technicians check
the Unha-3 rocket at Tangachai -ri space center on Sunday. (AFP-Yonhap
News)
With only days to go before launching a satellite to mark the centenary of its
late founder Kim Il-sung’s birth, North Korea held a series of lavish events to
celebrate the completion of power plants, factories and buildings, news reports
said.
North Korea has said it will launch Kwangmyongsong-3 some time
between April 12 and 16, in celebration of the 100th year of Kim’s birth on
April 15. The launch is part of moves to declare 2012 the year when North Korea
becomes a “power state.”
The North’s Korean Central News Agency said on
Friday that Pyongyang held ceremonies to mark the completion of Huichon Power
Plant 1 and 2, located near Chongchon River, capable of generating 300,000
kilowatts of electricity. The construction of the two power plants was a major
goal for Pyongyang, and one which late leader Kim Jong-il had ordered reached by
2012.
The North also unveiled a huge rock carving on Thursday in memory
of the nation’s founder.
The 37-meter inscription was hewn into a natural
rock face near Bakyeon Falls in Gaeseong city, near the border with South Korea,
the official news agency said.
The message ― “Our eternal leader Comrade
Kim Il-sung: Dedicated to the centenary of the birth of the leader, April 15,
Juche 101 (2012)” ― is “an immortal monument which will always shine along with
the Seongun era,” the news agency said.
On the same day, multiple news
reports from the state said the North completed a clothes factory, a water pipe
linking Nampo and Pyongyang and a cement factory.
In Pyongyang,
development projects are still under way in the Mansudae area for high-rise
apartments and a theater.
In the eastern part of the capital, which is
less developed than western Pyongyang, the North is near completion of a public
bath house and an outdoor ice-skating venue, according to state
media.
Along with the celebrations, the North’s rocket launch is nearly
ready, analysts said.
A U.S. specialist website, the 38 North, said the
North may have moved the first stage of a long-range rocket to its launch pad,
ahead of its possible lift-off this or next week.
An April 4 photo of the
launch site at Dongchang-ri in the country’s northwest indicated the first stage
of the Unha-3 rocket, while not visible, may be placed in the gantry, the
website said.
Meanwhile, foreign media reporters have arrived in
Pyongyang to cover the North’s planned rocket launch, the country’s official
news agency reported.
The North’s official Korean Central News Agency
said in a dispatch Saturday that reporters from more than 20 media firms,
including the Associated Press, CNN, Reuters, AFP, BBC, Kyodo News and NHK, had
arrived in Pyongyang on Friday and Saturday.
http://www.koreaherald.com/national/Detail.jsp?newsMLId=20120408000214
What are they doing now? What they're going to do is so reckless. If some pieces of missile fall down on the ground and some people get hurt, it will trigger conflict between North Korea and other countries. In more serious cases, it will be a sign of the declaring war. I think there is no country which is more aggressive than North Korea. North Korea is always trying to solve the problems with military force.
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