North Korea yesterday said it is fuelling a rocket for launch during a landmark anniversary as it gave its young leader a new title to bolster his authority.

(Country) insists it has nothing to hide and has invited an unprecedented number of foreign journalists to cover this week’s commemorations

Pyongyang has scheduled the launch in a five-day window starting today. It says the “historic” event is a centrepiece of celebrations marking the 100th anniversary of the birth of founding leader Kim Il-Sung on April 15.

The rocket is ostensibly designed to put an observation satellite in orbit, but the United States and allies say it is in fact a ballistic missile test by the nuclear-armed state in violation of a United Nations ban.

The anniversary will celebrate the family dynasty which has ruled the impoverished nation since 1948 and cement the power of the founder’s grandson Kim Jong-Un, who took over after his own father Kim Jong-Il died in December.

The ruling Workers’ Party, holding only its fourth-ever special conference yesterday, conferred an apparently new title of “first secretary” on Jong-Un and declared his late father its “eternal” general secretary.

“The communist state has created the new title for Jong-Un to control the party while continuing the legacy of his father,” Cheong Seong-Chang of South Korea’s Sejong Institute said.

Officials in Pyongyang said preparations for the launch were proceeding apace.

“We are injecting fuel as we speak. It has started (and it) will be over in the near future,” Paek Chang-Ho, director of North Korea’s mission control centre just outside Pyongyang, told foreign journalists.

“The launch of the satellite this time will be successful because Comrade Kim Jong-Un is guiding us through the launch step by step, and gives us personal guidance,” he said.

The same mission control was used when North Korea last said it placed a satellite in orbit, in 2009.

Foreign experts said no satellite was detected in orbit and called the exercise a disguised ballistic missile test.

That launch was followed by a nuclear test and the West fears the same pattern is being repeated now as the communist state tries to perfect dual-use technology that can double for intercontinental missiles.

US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Tuesday said North Korea faced a clear choice.

“We are consulting closely in capitals and at the United Nations in New York and we will be pursuing appropriate action,” she said at a news conference with Japanese Foreign Minister Koichiro Gemba, who echoed her remarks.

“If North Korea wants a peaceful, better future for their people, it should not conduct another launch that would be a direct threat to regional security,” Clinton said.

Admiral Samuel Locklear, the head of the US Pacific Command, said in Tokyo yesterday that North Korea over time has pursued “increasingly sophisticated ballistic missile defence technologies”.

If the nation can increase the potential range of its missiles, this “will be a concern for the alliance, a concern for the region as well as a concern for the US”, he said.

However, North Korea insists it has nothing to hide and has invited an unprecedented number of foreign journalists to cover the commemorations. Four busloads of visitors were escorted to the two-storey mission control in a heavily guarded, wooded compound in Pyongyang’s northern suburbs. Inside were 16 white-coated technicians, both men and women, hunched over computer screens.

A main screen in front of them showed what official minders said was a live image of the 30-metre rocket on its launch pad in the country’s far northwest, shrouded at its top to protect the satellite payload.

Foreign space experts invited on the tour said the mission control appeared dated compared to modern facilities in the West or Russia.

Mr Paek said that all the computer hardware and software had been developed in North Korea.

The launch of the Unha-3 (Galaxy 3) rocket is the centrepiece of this weekend’s mass anniversary festivities, and North Korea has rejected criticism that the launch’s cost could feed its hungry people for a year.

Tens of thousands in the tightly regimented state have been sprucing up the capital Pyongyang as the government’s propaganda machine rallies the people behind Kim Jong-Un, who is in his late 20s.

An annual session of Parliament will be held tomorrow. Legislators could elevate him to his father’s old post, chairman of the all-powerful National Defence Commission, or again create a new title for Jong-Un.

With the launch imminent, North Korea yesterday also announced the appointment of a new armed forces minister, Kim Jong-Gak, in what analysts said was a sign the new leader is installing close confidants to key posts.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.