North Korea mobilises young labourers in new housing plan amid economic woes

North Korean leader Kim Jong Un (third from right) and his daughter Kim Ju Ae at a ceremony for the construction of a new street in Pyongyang's Sopo district, in an undated photo released on Sunday. PHOTO: REUTERS

SEOUL – North Korean leader Kim Jong Un has mobilised young labourers to launch a new housing project in Pyongyang, state media said on Sunday, as he pushes for an ambitious plan to build 50,000 homes in the capital despite deepening economic hardships.

Mr Kim attended a ground-breaking ceremony for the construction project in Pyongyang’s Sopo district on Saturday with thousands of young labourers, the official KCNA news agency reported.

In 2021, Mr Kim unveiled a plan to build 50,000 new homes in Pyongyang by 2025, and state media reported the completion of the first 10,000 new apartments in 2022, including an 80-floor skyscraper.

The plan came after South Korea warned of a deepening food crisis in the isolated North amid sanctions over its weapons programmes and the fallout from Covid-19 lockdowns, including a recent surge in deaths from starvation in some countryside regions.

North Korea has not confirmed any food shortages, but the ruling party has scheduled a meeting for late February to discuss agricultural development, calling it a “very important and urgent task”.

Mr Kim has said the housing project faces “unprecedentedly harsh challenges”. He has mobilised the young labour units, called dolgyeokdae, or “shock brigade”, in his pet infrastructure initiatives – including a massive housing campaign in the northern alpine town of Samjiyon – which have often faced lacklustre progress amid resource shortages.

In Sopo, he aims to create a “distinctive street” with about 4,100 homes, in addition to a recently launched drive for 10,000 apartments, Mr Kim said, thanking some 100,000 young men who volunteered to work on the project. The new housing project would serve as “another proud page in the history of youth movements” and a symbol of the country’s socialist revolution and “political struggle”, Mr Kim added.

“The distinctive architectures of this street will intuitively show our nation’s status and rapid development,” said Mr Kim, who was accompanied by his young daughter, Kim Ju Ae, who has appeared recently at a series of major events.

“It will clearly prove to the world how our movement and struggle are advancing and developing and how vigorously they are expanding even in the face of the most arduous trials and difficulties,” he added. REUTERS

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