SEOUL, South Korea - North Korean leader Kim Jong Il has made his first
public appearance since his country test-launched a barrage of missiles more
than a month ago, official media reported Sunday.
Kim visited a farm run by an army unit and was accompanied by top generals,
according to the state-run Korean Central News Agency. As usual with such
reports, the exact time or location of the trip were not given.
Kim's last reported public appearance was July 4, a day before Pyongyang
launched seven missiles, including a new long-range model believed capable of
reaching the US that failed shortly after takeoff. The move violated the
country's self-imposed moratorium on long-range missile launches.
The launches prompted the UN Security Council to unanimously pass a
resolution sanctioning the North, which Pyongyang has rejected as an
infringement on its sovereign right to conduct missile launches.
Since North Korea test-launched the shorter-range Taepodong-1 rocket over
Japan in 1998, Pyonyang's missile program has been regarded as a major security
issue in Northeast Asia, adding to concerns about the hardline regime's pursuit
of nuclear bombs.
Kim's absence from public view had fueled speculation of a possible crisis in
the country in the wake of the missile tests and international reaction.
However, Kim has dropped from sight before for longer periods of time: In
2003, he was not reported to have ventured out for seven weeks after the country
quit the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty and the United States moved toward
invading Iraq.
In the latest visit, Kim toured a rabbit and goat farm producing food for the
military - the focus of his "songun", or "military-first," policy that
gives soldiers first priority for the country's scarce resources.
"As our country has many mountains, it is possible to raise goats and rabbits
and other grass-eating animals in every part of it," Kim said, according to
KCNA.
As many as 2 million people are believed to have died in famine caused by
natural disasters and mismanagement in impoverished country during the 1990s.
Floods that struck the country in mid-July have raised concerns about new
threats to its food supply, and left a reported 844 dead and
missing.