Nuclear-armed prima donnas? North Korean girl band bailed after Beijing objected to images of missiles being used during performance
China decided that Xi Jinping and other top-ranking officials would not attend the performance, so North Korea responded by cancelling what would have been the band’s first concert abroad.
PUBLISHED : Friday, 18 December, 2015, 9:38am
UPDATED : Friday, 18 December, 2015, 9:41am
Agence France-Presse in Seoul
Members of the Moranbong Band arrive at Beijing International Airport. Photo: Reuters
Disputes over a background scene flaunting North Korean missiles sparked the cancellation of a rare performance by a popular North Korean pop group in Beijing last week, a news report said on Friday.
South Korea’s largest circulation Chosun Ilbo daily quoted a high-ranking South Korean government official as saying that the all-girl Moranbong band, formed by leader Kim Jong-un, decided to return home rather than yield to pressure from Chinese authorities to stop projecting the scene of long-range missiles being launched on a large background screen on stage.
The Moranbong Band in Pyongyang. Photo: AFP
Chinese authorities who spotted the scene during a rehearsal urged the band to drop it because of the concert’s high-profile audience including President Xi Jinping, the daily said.
In the face of strong objections from the band, China decided that Xi and other top-ranking officials would not attend the performance. North Korea responded by cancelling what would have been the band’s first concert abroad, the South Korean official was quoted as saying by Chosun Ilbo.
The reclusive country’s premier pop group returned home, hours before the scheduled performance was due to begin in Beijing. There has been no official explanation from either North Korea or China over why the band’s trip was cut short.
The reclusive country’s premier pop group returned home, hours before the performance was due to begin in Beijing. Photo: AP
China has been attempting to reactivate six-party talks on ending North Korea’s nuclear weapons programmes. The negotiations collapsed in 2009 following a long-range missile launch and a nuclear test by the North.
China has traditionally been North Korea’s sole regional ally and main provider of trade and aid, but ties have become strained in recent years as Pyongyang has pressed ahead with internationally-condemned nuclear tests.
Kim himself has yet to visit Beijing, three years after inheriting power from his father Kim Jong-il.