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North Korea to hold military celebration on eve of Olympics

This 25 April 2007 picture, released from Korean Central News Agency 26 April, shows North Korean soldiers, carrying a large portrait of late North Korean leader Kim Il Sung, marching during a grand military parade to celebrate the 75th founding anniversary of the KPA at the Kim Il Sung square in Pyongyang. Kim Jong Il, North Korean leader at the time, inspected the parade. KCNA/AFP/Getty Images

North Korea will mark the foundation of its regular army on Feb. 8, its state media said Tuesday – the day before the Winter Olympics open in the South.

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Reports and officials say that Pyongyang could be preparing a military parade as a display of strength ahead of the sporting festival, which has triggered a rare rapprochement between the two halves of the divided peninsula.

In recent years Pyongyang has proclaimed Apr. 25 as the establishment of its army, naming it as the day the country’s founder Kim Il Sung set up anti-Japanese guerrilla forces in 1932.

It will now mark the foundation on Feb. 8, when Kim launched the Korean People’s Army (KPA) regular armed forces in 1948, the ruling Workers’ Party announced.

Until 1978 the anniversary was marked on the February date, and the switch back gives Pyongyang a formal justification if it decides to go ahead with a parade next month, which will be the 70th anniversary of the regular military’s establishment.

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WATCH: A delegation of North Korean officials arrived in South Korea on Sunday to spend two days inspecting various centres in Gangneung city, which will host several of the Olympic events.

Satellite photos have shown troops and military vehicles rehearsing at an airfield near Pyongyang for an event.

A South Korean government official told the Yonhap news agency that they were increasing in numbers.

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“At Mirim airfield, 13,000 soldiers and some 200 vehicles were spotted preparing for the parade,” the unidentified official was quoted as saying.

But Pyongyang is bitterly cold in February and the numbers are smaller than those involved in a giant spectacle last April to mark the 105th anniversary of Kim Il-Sung’s birth, which showcased a range of weaponry including what appeared to be a new intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM).

The government and other authorities will take “practical steps to significantly mark” the February 8 anniversary, which was “a historic day,” said the ruling party’s Political Bureau, according to the North’s state news agency KCNA.

April 25 will continue to be marked as the founding anniversary of the Korean People’s Revolutionary Army, it added.

Under current leader Kim Jong-Un, Kim Il-Sung’s grandson, Pyongyang last year rattled the international community with nuclear and missile tests.

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But it has agreed to send athletes to the South’s Pyeongchang Winter Olympics, march with the South under one flag at the opening ceremony and form an inter-Korean women’s ice hockey team.

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