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Seoul.
North Korea has opened a department store in its capital offering luxury goods
for the ruling elite to try to bolster loyalty before a second dynastic
succession, officials and reports said on Monday.
The store
named Potongkang opened in February, selling imported high-end brands such as
Chanel and Giorgio Armani as well as medicine, furniture and foods, a South
Korean government official said on condition of anonymity.
The store
forms part of the isolated North’s project to give its showpiece capital a
facelift, even though much of the country suffers severe food shortages. UN
agencies say a quarter of the population urgently needs food aid.
The
capital’s new look is intended for completion before the 100th anniversary in
April of the birth of founding president Kim Il-Sung. The regime has set the
goal of becoming a “great, powerful and prosperous nation” by then.
Leader Kim
Jong-Il engages in “gift politics” by showering top aides and the elite with
luxury goods to win loyalty to his ruling family, Seoul analysts say.
Kim has
speeded up plans for an eventual second dynastic succession since he suffered a
stroke in August 2008. His youngest son was given senior party posts in
September last year, confirming his status as leader-in-waiting.
South Korean
newspapers said Kim had ordered his staff to improve life for privileged
residents in the capital by prioritizing the supply of drinking water, heating
and power.
When the
communist North received 50,000 tons of food assistance from Russia in August,
Kim ordered that 40,000 tons be allotted to Pyongyang citizens, Dong-A Ilbo
newspaper said.
High-rise
apartment buildings, theatres and parks have been built in Pyongyang and old
street lights and neon signs have been replaced, it said.
In October,
the North said it had built a public service complex featuring equipment for
bathing, haircuts and beauty treatment and an outdoor ice rink.
College
students and soldiers have been drafted in to help with construction, which was
dogged by lack of funds and building materials.
In contrast
to the capital’s amenities, residents of other regions have electric power only
for one to four hours daily, Dong-A said.
Agence France-Presse

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