“We should cherish last year’s high-level talks and make continued efforts to seek dialogue and not take any further steps backwards,” Kim Jong Un said of the August negotiations, adding that he would be open to talks with anyone to discuss “peaceful unification”.
Applause was played at various points throughout what appeared to be a pre-recorded message.
Photographs of factories and farms were interspersed with video of Kim standing in a wood-paneled room in front of a red flag bearing the crest of the ruling Workers’ Party.
Speeches by a North Korean leader used to be rare. The voice of Kim’s father, Kim Jong Il, was only broadcast on state television once, and he made no known public speeches during his 17-year rule.
For years, leaders’ speeches were only presented as editorials in state newspapers.
Kim Jong Un, however, has turned to broadcasting his speeches and using them to deliver his message. He speaks in a style similar to that of his grandfather, founding president Kim Il Sung.
The speech is closely watched for clues of any policy changes.Bureau Report
Kim pledged to develop North Korea’s moribund economy and raise living standards, although North Korean leaders have been saying that for decades.
Impoverished North Korea is under heavy U.N. sanctions related to its nuclear and missile programs. Kim did not mention the nuclear program in his speech. Reports by Mr J Pearson
Bureau Report
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