North Korea’s Kim Jong Un Establishes New Deputy Post Amid Speculation Sister is Possible Successor

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North Korea’s Kim Jong Un Establishes New Deputy Post Amid Speculation Sister is Possible Successor

Citing an unidentified source, Yonhap News Agency on Tuesday said that Kim Jong Un, the leader of North Korea, established a first secretary post during a Supreme People’s Assembly meeting in Pyongyang in January. There has been speculation over who will hold the position, with some sources naming his sister, Kim Yo Jong, as a candidate.

“In case of an emergency, including those involving leader Kim’s health, Kim Yo Jong is likely to take up this deputy position and act temporarily as the successor until power is handed over to Kim Jong-un’s son,” former Unification Minister Lee Jong-seok told reporters during an online briefing Tuesday according to Yonhap.

In the briefing, Lee maintained that a high ranking member of the Politburo, Jo Yong Won, who is considered a close aide to Kim Jong Un, was also cited as a possible candidate. However, Lee hinted that consideration for the role would focus on staying within the Kim family.

Jo is seen as holding the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) government’s number three position, after leader Kim Jong Un and Choe Ryong Hae, chairman of the Standing Committee of the Supreme People’s Assembly. Another person who has been cited for the position is Kim Tok Hun, who is currently serving as premier of the nation.

Rachel Minyoung Lee, a fellow with 38 North, US-based North Korean satellite surveillance website operated by the Stimson Center think tank in Washington, DC, told Reuters that “this seems to be the broader trend of North Korea delegating and redistributing some of Kim Jong Un’s duties to others, not necessarily his powers, and streamlining the party leadership structure.”

North Korea’s Kim Jong Un Establishes New Deputy Post Amid Speculation Sister is Possible Successor

Kim Yo Jong, vice-director of the Information and Publicity Department of the Workers’ Party of Korea

According to CBS News, Cheong Seong-chang, the director of the center for North Korean Studies at the Sejong Institute, said that this move shows North Korea’s confidence as a standing global power.

The position was created as the party revised its Worker’s Party of Korea rules to include a paragraph that the party’s Central Committee should elect a first secretary at the same time Kim Jong Un was elected general secretary of the party.

DPRK also dropped the word “songun,” or military-first policy, in the preamble of the revised party rules, which was the main policy that was pursued by Kim Jong Il, the late father of the current leader.

The North also deleted phrasing which stated that the party members “must actively fight to speed up the unification of the fatherland” in elaboration of members’ duties. Some see the change as suggesting that North Korea has given up its push for the unification of North and South Korea, but is instead pursuing co-existence of the two different states on the Korean Peninsula.

According to reports from Seoul, the North Korean leader was last seen in public on May 6,  when he held a photo session with the members of the military’s families following an arts performance.

“This was another signal that we are ready and prepared to have dialogue with the DPRK, and we hope that they will take us up on that possibility,” Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman said Wednesday in a telephone conference with reporters, voicing hope for DPRK to “take us up on that possibility.”  

Sourse: sputniknews.com

North Korea’s Kim Jong Un Establishes New Deputy Post Amid Speculation Sister is Possible Successor

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