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NUKEWARS
N. Korea parliament vows continued push for nuclear program
by Staff Writers
Seoul (AFP) April 9, 2015


'Plot-breeding' US aid worker deported by N. Korea arrives in China
Beijing (AFP) April 9, 2015 - An American aid worker deported by North Korea on charges of using her humanitarian status as a cover to gather and produce anti-Pyongyang propaganda arrived in China Thursday, the US embassy said.

Sandra Suh arrived at Beijing's Capital International Airport on a flight from Pyongyang, US embassy spokesman Nolan Barkhouse confirmed.

Asked for details on when Suh might return to the US, Barkhouse declined to comment.

Pyongyang's official KCNA news agency said Wednesday that Suh had been a frequent visitor to North Korea over the past 20 years "under the pretence of humanitarianism".

She had "engaged in plot-breeding" and secretly taken photos and produced videos that had then been used as "propaganda abroad", KCNA said.

According to the dispatch, Suh had admitted her crimes and "earnestly begged for pardon".

KCNA said the decision to deport rather than detain her had been made "taking into full consideration her old age", without specifying how old she was.

Sandra Suh is registered as having founded a California-based organisation, Wheat Mission Ministries, in 1989, to provide food aid and medical technology to North Korea.

The organisation's website does not list Suh among its current staff and calls to its office in Los Angeles went unanswered.

Like a number of other humanitarian groups working in North Korea, Wheat Mission Ministries has a Christian grounding.

Pyongyang views foreign missionaries as seditious elements intent on fomenting unrest, but tolerates some faith-based aid groups.

North Korea on Thursday vowed to continue its push to develop nuclear weapons as well as ease chronic food and energy shortages during a rare parliamentary session that was closely watched by observers.

The announcement made following the meeting -- one of the few opportunities to gauge the mood inside the reclusive nation -- stuck closely to a New Year's speech by leader Kim Jong-Un which stressed the need to improve people's living standards.

According to the official KCNA news agency, Prime Minister Pak Pong-Ju told the legislative assembly that 2014 was "a year of shining victories as the foundation for winning a final victory in all fields of building a thriving nation was consolidated".

"The main thrusts for this year are to organise the economic work with a main emphasis on solving the food problem of the people with agriculture, stock-breeding and fisheries as the three pivots, drastically increasing power production and putting metal industry on Juche (self-reliance) basis," he said.

"It is important to thoroughly carry out the party's strategic line on simultaneously developing economic construction and the building of a nuclear force," Pak added.

The North's Supreme People's Assembly (SPA) meets only once or twice a year, mostly for day-long sessions to rubber-stamp budgets or other decisions made by the leadership, and is carefully monitored by observers for any changes to economic policy or a reshuffle of high-ranking officials.

Current leader Kim Jong-Un was absent from Thursday's session, South Korea's Yonhap news agency said. He was also a no-show at the last SPA session in September 2014 when he was recovering from ankle surgery.

KCNA reported Wednesday that the nearly 690 SPA deputies had gathered in the capital for the meeting.

North Korea's economy has started to show signs of growth in recent years -- albeit off a low base in a country where the majority of people live in poverty.

It is still an extremely poor country by any standards, but a thriving black economy -- tolerated by the regime -- has brought significant changes.

Unauthorised private markets have lessened dependence on a dysfunctional state ration system and provided a crucial income source for those on near-worthless state salaries.

The parliamentary session comes after the United Nations on Wednesday launched an appeal for $111 million dollars (103 million euros) to help the 70 percent of North Korea's population it says is now facing a food crisis.


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