Jakarta Globe – AFP, December 30, 2013
Seoul.
North Korea’s deputy ambassador to UNESCO returned home on Monday after being
recalled as part of a purge prompted by the execution of the once-powerful
uncle of leader Kim Jong-un, a report said.
Jang
Song-thaek, once the North’s unofficial number two and Kim’s political mentor,
was put to death on Dec. 12 on an array of charges including treason and
corruption.
The shock
purge – staged in an unusually dramatic and public fashion in the isolated
communist state – was the biggest political upheaval since the young ruler took
power after the death of his father and the former leader, Kim Jong-il, two
years ago.
Seoul’s spy
chief earlier this month said two of Jang’s associates had also been executed,
while Pyongyang reportedly recalled some diplomats or trade officials overseas
who were believed to have been close to Jang.
Hong Yong,
the North’s deputy permanent delegate to UNESCO, and his wife were spotted at
Beijing airport on Monday before taking the flight to Pyongyang, South Korea’s
Yonhap news agency said.
Hong, one
of Jang’s associates, took the post only six months ago, it said, quoting a
diplomatic source in Beijing.
Yonhap said
earlier this month that Jang’s nephew and the North’s ambassador to Malaysia,
Jang Yong-chol, had been recalled.
It said
last week the North’s ambassador to Sweden, Pak Kwang-chol, and his wife had
also been summoned back to Pyongyang.
Pak, who
had taken the post in Sweden in late 2012, was seen at Beijing airport being
escorted by North Korean officials before taking the flight to Pyongyang on
Friday, Yonhap said.
Ryoo
Kihl-jae, South Korea’s unification minister in charge of cross-border affairs,
told a parliamentary committee on Monday that the North has been purging
officials close to the executed uncle.
“We are
seeing signs that those who were deeply involved with Jang are being recalled
and purged,” he said.
The purge however
appears to be targeting a relatively small circle of officials, Ryoo said,
rejecting speculation of a sweeping clear-out of party and military ranks.
“We do not
see that it [the purge] is being carried out on a large scale, though it still
needs to be seen to what direction it would develop,” he said.
The
execution of Jang raised questions about political instability in the
impoverished but nuclear-armed North.
Jang is
believed to have played a key role in cementing the leadership of Jong-un. But the
67-year-old’s growing political power and influence was increasingly resented
by the young leader barely half his age, analysts say.
The Kim
family has ruled the North for more than six decades through a pervasive
personality cult. Those showing the slightest sign of dissent have been sent to
prison camps or executed.
Agence France-Presse

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.