Turnout was just short of 100 percent as those ‘abroad or working in oceans’ were unable to take part, says state media.
Turnout in North Korea’s single-candidate election was 99.99 percent this year, up from 99.97 percent the last time it was held, state media reported.
This year’s turnout fell just short of 100 percent as those “abroad or working in oceans” were unable to take part, North Korea’s official KCNA news agency reported on Tuesday.
Millions of North Koreans voted in the national polls on Sunday. The election is held every five years to elect what is widely seen as a rubber-stamp legislature known as the Supreme People’s Assembly.
With only one approved name on each voting slip, the result is never in doubt.
But the list of 687 elected deputies reported by KCNA did not include Kim Jong Un, raising speculation about the reason for his exclusion.
State media did not mention Kim’s candidate registration before or after the elections, South Korea’s Yonhap news agency reported before adding that the decision does not appear to suggest that his grip on power is slipping.
Kim was last elected to the assembly in March 2014 when the first election was held since he came to power, running from Mount Paektu, constituency number 111, a mountain known to be the sacred birthplace of his late father.
Sunday’s elections, like in 2014, saw results come 100 percent in favour of all named candidates.
“All the electors participated as one in the election to cement our people’s power as firm as a rock,” KCNA said, citing a report released by the Central Election Committee.
“One hundred percent of them cast their ballots for the candidates for deputies to the SPA registered in relevant constituencies.”
Kim’s younger sister and close aide Kim Yo Jong was among the newly elected, said Yonhap.
Critics say the North Korean election, with its total absence of electoral competition, is largely a political rite for enabling the authorities to claim a mandate from the people while reinforcing loyalty to the government and social unity.
But state media said the turnout was “an expression of the absolute support and trust of all voters in the DPRK government”.
“The election will strikingly manifest the fixed will of our people to firmly trust and uphold to the last Supreme Leader Kim Jong Un despite storm and stress,” the ruling party’s official daily said in a commentary on Sunday.
“All the people have to fully display through the election the invincibility and might of the DPRK advancing by dint of the single-minded unity.”
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