Asia/South Asia
5 years ago

North Korea election sees 99.99pc voter turnout

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Surprise as leader Kim Jong-un 'not on ballot'

North Korea's election has resulted in the expected landslide win for its authoritarian leadership and turnout in this election hit 99.99 per cent, which was 99.97 per cent in previous election.

Millions of North Koreans head to nationwide polls every five years to elect the rubber-stamp legislature known as the Supreme People’s Assembly (SPA).

With only one approved name on each voting slip in the isolated country, which is ruled with an iron grip by Kim Jong Un's Workers' Party, the result is never in doubt.

Voting in last Sunday's election was mandatory for all North Korean citizens above the age of 17, even though there was no choice of candidates, reports BBC.

The parliament is elected every five years, turnout is always close to 100 per cent and approval for the governing Workers' Party is unanimous.

The North's official news agency KCNA said on Tuesday that this year's turnout was 99.99 per cent, as those "abroad or working in oceans" were unable to participate.

But, Kim's name does not appear to have been on the ballot, giving a big surprise for the world.

If confirmed, it would be the first time a North Korean leader has not run for its rubberstamp parliament.

The vote did see his sister, Kim Yo-jong, elected to the body, however.

The leader's younger sibling has been gradually moving into a more influential role.

North Korea's parliamentary election is used by Pyongyang to legitimise its rule, but is condemned internationally as a meaningless exercise. Each voting slip has only one state-approved candidate on it.

State media announced the names of the 687 deputies elected to the Supreme People's Assembly (SPA) on Tuesday, but Mr Kim's name was not read out.

Rachel Minyoung Lee, an analyst with North Korea specialist website NK News, said that his absence from the list does not suggest a weakening grip on power.

"This could be part of North Korea's ongoing effort to be perceived as a 'normal state'," she said. "And in most democratic countries, the president doesn't concurrently have a seat in the parliament."

As for the leader's sister, Ms Lee explained that Kim Yo-jong had not been elected in the previous 2014 election but had since become a member of the SPA, "possibly in a by-election due to someone's death".

Ms Kim's profile has been on the rise since 2014, when she was made vice-director of the party's key Propaganda and Agitation Department.

She has become a regular on her brother's foreign travels, including the recent Hanoi meeting with US President Donald Trump, which reinforces her position as a close aide.

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