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Kim proves he remains in charge of NKorea

Hyung-Jin Kim The Associated Press

Issue date: 4/10/09 Section: News
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In this image made off KRT footage distributed by APTN, North Korean leader Kim Jong II takes part in voting at Supreme People's Assembly of the country Thursday, April 9, 2009 in Pyongyang, North Korea. Kim made a triumphant return to parliament Thursday for his reappointment as the leader of North Korea on the heels of a rocket launch heralded as
In this image made off KRT footage distributed by APTN, North Korean leader Kim Jong II takes part in voting at Supreme People's Assembly of the country Thursday, April 9, 2009 in Pyongyang, North Korea. Kim made a triumphant return to parliament Thursday for his reappointment as the leader of North Korea on the heels of a rocket launch heralded as "historic" at home but assailed elsewhere as provocative.

SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - A visibly grayer and thinner Kim Jong Il proved Thursday he remains in charge of communist North Korea, presiding over parliament in a triumphant return to center stage after months out of the public eye following a reported stroke.

Limping slightly, Kim arrived at the grand hall housing the 687-seat Supreme People's Assembly to a standing ovation and praise for a weekend rocket launch heralded as "historic" at home though assailed in some nations as provocative.

A master at building drama, Kim fed the world's curiosity for months about his health after reports said he had a stroke and underwent brain surgery in August - though North Korea has denied that he was ever ill.

Kim solemnly acknowledged his reappointment as chairman of the powerful National Defense Commission, which under North Korea's constitution makes him the nation's top leader while his father, late North Korea founder Kim Il Sung, remains "eternal president."

"Having comrade Kim Jong Il at the highest post of our country again is a great honor and happiness for our military and people and a great happy event for all Korean people," a newscaster said on state TV.

State media made no mention of Kim from August until October, when there indications that he had re-emerged, with accounts of his visits to farms, factories and military bases. But no video images of him were released until this week.

And Thursday's appearance was his first at a major public event, with taped video footage broadcast the same day, finally putting to rest any question about whether he has recuperated from the reported stroke that sparked fears of a succession crisis in the nuclear-armed nation.
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