North Korea celebrated the 110th birthday of its late state founder on Friday, but there was no sign of an expected military parade showcasing the country’s latest weaponry.
State media aired live footage of an evening gala in Kim Il Sung square after sundown on Friday, but the footage gave no sign of an anticipated military parade.
According to the state-run Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), all the participants at Kim Il Sung “raised stormy cheers of Hurrah” when North Korean leader Kim Jong Un appeared, and fireworks were let off.
KCNA said that phrases like “independence in politics” and “self-reliance in defense” were displayed at the complex to symbolize the nation’s path to victory.
It stated that the festival “artistically depicted” Kim Il Sung’s native home and “the sacred mountain of revolution, Mt Paektu.” Residents could also take photos in front of arches lit with phrases such as “Pyongyang Is Best” and “We Are the Happiest in the World.”
Pyongyang will usually hold a military parade on the Day of the Sun, the birthday of its founder, Kim Il Sung, to display its new weaponry. The event on April 15 is also considered the most important national holiday in North Korea.
Specialist service site NK News on Friday cited unnamed sources who claimed to have heard the sound of “jet aircraft and helicopters flying low over the city center” the day before the event.
Satellite imagery also showed that “nearly non-stop” training was taking place at the Mirim military parade training complex in the weeks preceding the national event, with thousands of troops marching in formation, NK News said.
But there was no mention in state media of a military parade happening as of Friday evening.
The United States and South Korea had also expected Pyongyang to mark the national event with new weaponry or engage in a provocative act by conducting nuclear tests.
The U.S. navy reportedly deployed a nuclear-powered aircraft carrier group this week to the waters between Japan and the Korean Peninsula to reassure allies and partners of the U.S. commitment to maintaining stability in the region.
“We are worried that, in connection with the upcoming April 15th anniversary, [North Korea] may be tempted to take another provocative action. We obviously hope not, but we will be prepared,” Sung Kim, U.S. special envoy for North Korea, told reporters on April 6.
North Korea has conducted more than 10 missile tests since the start of the year, one of which involved a Hwasong-17, which experts dubbed a “monster missile” capable of striking anywhere in the United States and beyond.
Reuters contributed to this report.
From The Epoch Times