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Nationwide Anti-U.S. Rallies on Korean War Anniversary Day

Hundreds of thousands of North Koreans marked the war with anti-U.S. demos.

SEOUL, June 25 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) - North Korea staged nationwide anti-U.S. rallies Tuesday, June 25, to mark the 52nd anniversary of the Korean War, the North’s state media reported.

Rallies in towns and cities across the communist state adopted resolutions vowing to take “a thousand-fold revenge upon the U.S. imperialists and wipe them out to the last man if they unleash a war in Korea again,” Agence France-Presse (AFP) reported.

Ceremonies were held in North and South Korea to mark the outbreak of the war which left an estimated three million dead.

The United States led a 16-nation force that fought with the capitalist South against North Korea after troops from the communist North crossed the Cold War frontier June 25, 1950.

Fighting ended in July 1953 with an armistice, but no peace treaty has ever been signed, leaving the rival Koreas in a state of permanent alert.

North Korea has never established relations with the United States and ties were strained again after U.S. President George W. Bush described the communist state was part of a so-called “axis of evil” allegedly spreading weapons of mass destruction.

“The country is swept by waves of rallies condemning the U.S. imperialist aggressors on the occasion of ‘June 25, The Day of Struggle Against The U.S. Imperialists’,” reported the North’s official Korean Central News Agency (KCNA).

It added that one rally of agriculture workers was held in the city of Sinchon “to vow revenge”.

“The speakers at the rallies said that the Korean War, provoked by the U.S. imperialists, was a criminal war of aggression to impose colonial slavery upon the Korean people” and also aimed “to massacre civilians”.

The report said rallies denounced U.S. forces for reducing “peaceful cities, farming and fishing villages, hospitals, kindergartens and nurseries of Korea to ashes by indiscriminate bombing and bombardment and committing unprecedented mass killings.”

KCNA said “the rallies evinced the resolutions of the agricultural workers and women to take a thousand-fold revenge upon the U.S. Imperialists and wipe them out to the last man if they unleash a war in Korea again.”

Meanwhile, in South Korea, veterans of the Korean War saw their annual commemoration Tuesday of the war overshadowed by World Cup football and called for greater acknowledgement of their efforts.

The main ceremony to commemorate the 52nd anniversary of the outbreak of the war was held at the national cemetery in Seoul in the presence of Prime Minister Lee Han-Dong and the heads of the South Korean army, navy and air force.

But in a speech, Korean Veterans Association (KVA) chairman Lee Sang-Hoon said even the World Cup would not have been possible without the sacrifices of the soldiers.

“Without the bravery and sacrifice of these war veterans who took the lead to save Korea, we could not afford to enjoy today's full lives, national prosperity, futuristic visions and the World Cup finals,” Lee said, quoted by AFP.

He added that the national unity behind South Korea's World Cup team, which has reached the semi-finals of the event, should be turned into a more patriotic fervor.

In the presence of 3,000 people, including veterans and the families of some of the estimated three million people killed in the Korean War, 112 remains from the hostilities found over the past year were buried at the national cemetery.

For the 50th anniversary of the war two years ago, thousands of foreign veterans came to Korea to take part in events. But this year, only 51 foreign veterans from the United States, the Netherlands, South Africa and Greece visited Korea at the invitation of the KVA.

A KVA spokesman said that the World Cup “may have affected” numbers taking part in commemoration ceremonies. Millions of South Koreans have taken to the streets to back the national football team.

President Kim sent letters to Korean War veterans apologizing for “not being able to thank you enough for your great deeds. I promise more involvement and more efforts in the future.”

Kim added: “We owe the freedom, democracy and prosperity that we enjoy today to the blood and sweat you veterans shed.”

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