Throngs of somber, weeping mourners marched Monday through the streets of the North Korean capital, carrying flowers and offering prayers for Kim Jong Il, their reclusive leader who died Saturday at age 69.
Television footage from the closed communist state showed thousands of mourners in Pyongyang gathered at the foot of a giant statue of Mr. Kim, as the public sought to absorb the news of his death.
The official Korean Central News Agency reported Mr. Kim died of a heart attack while on a train for one of his “field guidance” tours. The agency attributed his death to “physical and mental over-work.”
The agency announced a state funeral for December 28 in Pyongyang, and declared a 10-day period of national mourning. The report said the government will not accept “foreign delegations hoping to express condolences,” and said no entertainment will be allowed during the national bereavement.
Late last year, Mr. Kim promoted his youngest son Kim Jong Un, to the rank of four-star general, in what was seen as a bid to extend the world's only communist family dynasty to a third generation.
State media urged citizens to follow Kim Jong Un, who is believed to be around 28 years old.
In New York, U.N. General-Secretary Ban Ki-moon offered condolences to the North Korean people and reaffirmed his long-standing commitment to peace and security on the Korean peninsula. The official gesture came as the U.N. General Assembly condemned human rights abuses in North Korea, in a vote taken annually by the world body.
Kim Jong Il came to power after his father, North Korean founder Kim Il Sung, died in 1994. Since then, very little reliable biographical information about Mr. Kim has been available in the West. He rarely appeared in public and his voice was seldom broadcast.
He may be best remembered for defying the international community and boosting his country's nuclear program, while millions of North Koreans experienced widespread famine during much of the past two decades.