no
North Korea doesn't hold elections. It is a single party state with a single supreme ruler acting as head of state.
They did not. They did hold onto South Korea, though.
University of North Carolina and UCLA hold the record at 18 times.
Rungrado May Day Stadium. It can hold 150,000 people. It is in North Korea Pyongyang.
because it is only a single party state, with a single supreme ruler
That would've meant that the Soviets (Russians) would have released their hold on the northern portion of Korea. There would have been NO "North" and "South" Korea. Just a country called Korea. No war.
You can hold a Breaking Point submission hold in WWE 2k14 for 2 minutes.
North Korea has a huge barrier to the entry of information and, as a result, never had a formalized opposition, so when the Revolutions of 1989 spread over much of the communist world, no such thing occurred in North Korea. Kim Il-Sung was simply succeeded by his son, as had been the case with every Korean dynasty that had existed before (Joseon, Goryeo, Gogoryeo, etc.). The North Korean people knew no differently.
soccer by along way the biggest soccer stadium can hold 150 thousand people which is in north Korea whilst the largest hockey stadium can only hold 45 thousand
North Korea does not really have distinct branches of government, with the system being something closer to a complex military-political oligarchy led by the Premier. The internal politics of the North Korean regime are unclear and it may be the case that members of the government hold each other to a certain degree of accountability, but how this works is unknown.
he did not have a record