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Monday, 10 March 2014

No votes cast against Kim Jong-Un in poll

North Korean leader elected to national assembly with a perfect result, state media says.


North Koreans, dressed in traditional clothing, took part in the elections amid holiday atmosphere [AFP]
North Korea's leader Kim Jong Un has won every ballot cast by voters in his district, where he ran uncontested during the first electons to the Supreme People's Assembly legislature under his rule.

According to state media, Un's district, which is located on the symbolic Mount Paekdu, recorded 100 percent turnout during Sunday's elections, without a single dissenting ballot.
"This is an expression of all the service personnel and people's absolute support and profound trust in supreme leader Kim Jong Un as they single-mindedly remain loyal to him,'' the state-run Korean Central News Agency said, according to an Associated Press news agency report.
Un can now add MP to his many titles that include Supreme Commander of the armed forces and chairman of the powerful National Defence Commission.
Participation in the vote, although deemed ritualistic by external observers, is obligatory. Mobile ballot boxes have been created to cater to those who were ill and could not travel to balloting stations, the KCNA had reported.
A number of poems were produced to celebrate voting under titles including "The Billows of Emotion and Happiness" and "We Go To Polling Station".
Voting in public
But while electors get to approve 687 deputies, they don't get to choose who represents them in the rubber-stamp legislature. Voters could only say either yes or no to a single candidate running in each district.
"If you vote no, you need to - very publicly - enter a separate booth, and that is a something very few here are willing to risk," Al Jazeera's Stefanie Dekker said.
The last elections were held in 2009 under the late leader Kim Jong Il. He received 100 percent of the votes and turnout was reported to be 99.98%, she said.
Analysts will be closely watching to see if the deputies this time around reflect a generational change as Kim looks to solidify his power and replace older cadres with younger, more loyal ones.

The Supreme People's Assembly meets rarely, often only once a year. In practise it has little power and when it is not in session, its work is done by a smaller and more powerful body called the Presidium.

The new parliament was expected to meet next month. No date has been officially announced.

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