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Kim Jong Il Dead: Thousands Of Mourners Gather In Memory Of Late Leader

12/21/11 10:27 PM ET   AP

PYONGYANG, North Korea — All signs out of North Korea suggest the transition of power to Kim Jong Il's son is going smoothly, with no unusual troop movements and no buildup around the heavily fortified border, U.S. and South Korean defense officials said Thursday.

Pentagon press secretary George Little said that as of Wednesday the U.S. military has not seen any unusual military movements by the North Koreans.

"This appears to be a relatively smooth transition on the peninsula, and we hope it stays that way," he said, adding that there have been no increases in force protection levels for U.S. troops in South Korea.

U.S. Navy Capt. John Kirby, a Pentagon spokesman, also said the situation appeared to be under control.

"Things are calm there across the DMZ right now. And that's the way we'd like to see it," Kirby said, referring to the Demilitarized Zone that divides the two Koreas.

South Korean Defense Ministry spokesman Yoon Won-sik said North Korea's military isn't showing any particular movement and that the South's troops are operating normally.

Ratcheting up its propaganda machine, meanwhile, North Korea claimed Kim's death generated a series of spectacular natural phenomena, creating a mysterious glow atop a revered mountain, cracking a sheet of ice on a lake with a loud roar and inspiring a crane to circle a statue of the nation's founder before perching in a tree and drooping its head in sorrow.

North Korean media have presented a steady flow of dramatic scenes of mourning since Kim's death, which Pyongyang says happened on Saturday after he suffered a massive heart attack while on a train.

Tens of thousands of mourners packed Pyongyang's snowy main square Wednesday to pay respects to him. Women held handkerchiefs to their faces as they wept and filed past a huge portrait of a smiling Kim hanging on the Grand People's Study House, in the spot where a photograph of Kim Il Sung, Kim's deceased father and the country's founder, usually hangs.

A report late Wednesday by the North's official Korean Central News Agency said the odd occurrences began when Kim's death was announced on Monday and the nation went into mourning. State-run media have since the announcement run nonstop eulogies to Kim, who was the center of an intense cult of personality.

"Peculiar natural wonders were observed on Mt. Paektu, Jong Il Peak and Tonghung Hill in Hamhung City, where the statue of President Kim Il Sung is standing at a time when all Korean people are mourning the demise of leader Kim Jong Il in bitterest sorrow," the report said.

It said that on Tuesday a Manchurian crane was seen flying around a statue of Kim Il Sung three times before alighting on a tree. It said the crane stayed there for quite a long while with its head drooped before flying away in the direction of Pyongyang.

"Observing this, the director of the Management Office for the Hamhung Revolutionary Site, and others said in union that even the crane seemed to mourn the demise of Kim Jong Il born of heaven after flying down there at dead of cold night, unable to forget him," it said.

Behind the scenes, South Korean intelligence reports suggest North Korea is consolidating power behind Kim's untested, 20-something son, Kim Jong Un.

But concerns about possible instability in a country with a 1.2-million troop military, ballistic missiles and an advanced nuclear weapons development program remain high across the region.

South Korea has its military on high alert, and Chinese boatmen along a river separating North Korea and China told the AP that North Korean police have ordered them to stop giving rides to tourists, saying they will fire on the boats if they see anyone with cameras.

Kim Jong Il ruled the country for 17 years after inheriting power from his father, who died in 1994. Kim Jong Un only entered the public view last year and remains a mystery to most of the world.

South Korean military officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of office policies that restrict comment on intelligence matters, confirmed that North Korea has ordered its troops to be vigilant but said that doesn't mean they're being moved.

South Korea's intelligence agency has told Parliament members that an ad hoc committee headed by the Workers' Party's Central Military Commission, in which Kim Jong Un is a vice chairman, is expected to handle key state affairs before he formally becomes the country's leader.

The agency predicts Kim Jong Un's aunt Kim Kyong Hui, a key Workers' Party official, and Jang Song Thaek, a vice chairman of the powerful National Defense Commission, will play larger roles supporting the heir, according to a lawmaker who spoke to the AP.

A South Korean Defense Ministry official handling North Korea affairs, however, said there is too little information to make a confident judgment about where North Korea's power transition is heading.

According to a Defense Ministry report submitted to Parliament on Tuesday and leaked to reporters by South Korean lawmakers, some North Korean units conducting winter drills returned to base following the news of Kim Jong Il's death. It also said official mourning events have begun in a number of front-line bases across the country. The report did not elaborate.

The young Kim led a procession of senior officials Tuesday in a viewing of his father's body, which is being displayed in a glass coffin near that of Kim Il Sung. Publicly presiding over the funeral proceedings was an important milestone for the son, strengthening his image as the country's political face at home and abroad.

According to official media, more than 5 million North Koreans have gathered at monuments and memorials in the capital since Kim's death.

The North has declared an 11-day period of mourning that will culminate in a state funeral and a national memorial service on Dec. 28-29.

___

Reporting from Pyongyang by Associated Press Television News senior video journalist Rafael Wober. AP writers Foster Klug, Hyung-jin Kim, Sam Kim and Eric Talmadge in Seoul, South Korea, Lolita Baldor in Washington, and Korea bureau chief Jean H. Lee contributed to this story.

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A group of North Koreans take part in an organized display of mourning, in front of a portrait of Kim Jong Il in Pyongyang, North Korea, the day after his death was announced, Tuesday, Dec. 20, 2011. (AP)
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PYONGYANG, North Korea — All signs out of North Korea suggest the transition of power to Kim Jong Il's son is going smoothly, with no unusual troop movements and no buildup around the heavily fo...
PYONGYANG, North Korea — All signs out of North Korea suggest the transition of power to Kim Jong Il's son is going smoothly, with no unusual troop movements and no buildup around the heavily fo...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wardropper
Highly-detailed empty micro-bio
09:05 AM on 12/23/2011
A meaningless event.
04:41 AM on 12/23/2011
Kim Jong Il is dead,
let north korea can be reunion with south korea become ONE korea,
no more north korea and no more south korea,
let both koreas can become ONE KOREA,
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tony Sanchez
03:51 AM on 12/23/2011
I thought it was Boehner after agreeing to the tax cut.
12:01 AM on 12/23/2011
A truly great leader.My condolences go out to this great man .And wonderful friend.I will miss him dearly.
Jimmy Carter
everything news
I have no bio.
11:23 PM on 12/22/2011
Sorry, My comment was meant for Donal Trump. Wrong place.
everything news
I have no bio.
11:22 PM on 12/22/2011
Oh please, him again?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wardropper
Highly-detailed empty micro-bio
09:06 AM on 12/23/2011
No, Kim again.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JBaker
fictio cedit veritati
10:35 PM on 12/22/2011
The clip of dozens of mourners keeling over and wailing looked staged. Maybe it wasn't, maybe the Koreans have their own way of mourning as every culture does. I can't say. But their howling in grief nearly made me laugh out loud (yes that is a dreadful thing to say) and I don't want to make fun of someone else's deep feelings, but these folks act like they walked off the set of Saturday Night Live with their theatrical exhibitionism. I would be interested to know what they found so endearing about the man who starved so many of them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
insrob
Drinking my wine makes me feel fine!
09:36 PM on 12/22/2011
Those poor people are scared to death, as they should be, since no one has the tatas to do anything about it,or come to their rescue. I read so much about Hitler and how we can't have another one, how does the world stand by and let him treat his own people so poorly.? Are we afraid because he has nuclear weapons? If any leader had a backbone, they would welcome his passing and offer his son a chance to join the world, or face reality. This regime, does not deserve to be in power!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
insrob
Drinking my wine makes me feel fine!
09:04 PM on 12/22/2011
BREAKING NEWS!!!!!!POST IMMEDIATELY>>>KIM JONG II IS STILL DEAD>>>>>REPEAT>>>KIM JONG II IS STILL DEAD! END OF MESSAGE LOL
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07:22 PM on 12/22/2011
Jimmy Carter sent condolences to the young Kim. Smart and compassionate man, Mr Carter. Pity most Americans would rather make enemies with people than friends ... senseless to me ...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
insrob
Drinking my wine makes me feel fine!
09:15 PM on 12/22/2011
I would not be so eager to make friends with someone who victomizes his own people. My FRIENDS would not be launching missles at my other friends for no reason, knowing that only makes me less your friend. I would not be making friends with someone who threatens my friends, does not keep his word, runs prison camps, and generally thumbs it's nose at the rest of the world......Pity for Mr. Carter
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08:26 AM on 12/23/2011
Mr Carter is making judgements for his actions on intimate knowledge of what goes on between the US government and North Korea. He has also been to North Korea four different times and had long conversations with Mr. Kim. Are you now telling me that Mr. Carter is not a moral, upstanding, American because of his action? I think that even a judgemental person as yourself knows better than that.
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12:12 AM on 12/26/2011
Are you not an American? And if you are, then you must understand freedom of speech and opinion very well.,
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tssent
The facts, ma'am, just the facts
06:13 PM on 12/22/2011
I wouldn't want to speak ill of the deceased Il.
I'll let history do it for me.
06:05 PM on 12/22/2011
His son seems to be a reasonable man. I predict we will now make some progress with North Korea.
05:46 PM on 12/22/2011
Is Jimmy Carter attending ?
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elsquibbs
Socially liberal, fiscally prudent atheist.
08:05 PM on 12/22/2011
I don't think he's making the trip, so he sent along his condolences.
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elsquibbs
Socially liberal, fiscally prudent atheist.
05:30 PM on 12/22/2011
North Korea is about as insane a place as exists on this planet.
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07:19 PM on 12/22/2011
That is if you exclude Washington
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12:10 AM on 12/26/2011
just curious if kim jong II would let you imply negative thoughts of their capital..as you have the freedom to do here in America . Washington's not perfect but you will not go to jail just for saying it!
11:30 AM on 12/22/2011
Let's see...go to the funeral or go to jail...mmm what shall I do?