North Korea Goes to Polls to Approve New Parliament Lineup

North Korea held parliamentary elections Sunday, a key political event likely to cement national unity and leader Kim Jong-un's grip on power amid uncertainty over tough nuclear negotiations with the United States.

The communist state will elect new deputies for the 14th Supreme People's Assembly, its rubber-stamp legislature, in the polls held every five years.

They will replace those picked in the first parliamentary elections under the current leader in March 2014.

North Korean voters, aged 17 or order, were scheduled to cast their ballots between 9 am and 6 pm

Kim also participated at a polling station at Kim Chaek University of Technology in Pyongyang after arriving there at 11 am, the North's official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported.

The leader voted for Hong So-hon, the president of the university who is a parliamentary candidate.

'He gave a pep talk to (Hong), asking him to work well so that the university could fulfill its responsibility and obligation as the eldest son most trusted by the Party to make a breakthrough in improving science and education, invigorating (the) economy and bettering the standard of the people's living,' the KCNA said.

As of 3 pm, 92.35 percent of all registered voters had cast their ballots.

The candidates include workers, farmers, intellectuals and soldiers that are striving to uphold leader Kim's ideology and leadership, and backing his push for national development, according to the state media There is only a single candidate registered for each constituency.

Observers said that Pyongyang might use the political event to further reinforce national cohesion and have its people coalesce behind its ruler...

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