Analysts said the dispatch suggested Kim Kyong Hui's political standing hasn't been immediately affected by her husband's execution and she may have even given her nephew the green light to fire Jang but not to have him executed.
"Jang's purging may have taken place after Kim Kyong Hui consented to it. She may have opposed to Jang's death sentence but may still have agreed on Jang being dismissed," said analyst Hong Hyun-ik from the private Sejong Institute in South Korea.
Hong said that Kim Kyong Hui was expected to attend official ceremonies Tuesday marking the second anniversary of Kim Jong Il's death, which would draw all top North Korean officials, if her health condition allows it.
Looking pale and gaunt in recent state TV broadcasts, Kim Kyong Hui's public activities have been sharply reduced in recent months amid media reports that she suffers liver, heart and other ailments.
Kim Jin Moo, a North Korea expert at the state-run Korea Institute for Defense Analyses in Seoul, said that Jang's execution may have been possible because Kim Kyong Hui had not been actively engaged in politics due to her reported health problems.
Jang's execution was so shocking as it was carried out only a few days after his dismissal from all posts. It's unusual for the country to publicize any purging and execution of senior officials to the outside world. Many North Korea observers said the moves are aimed at strengthening Kim's power but also indicate Kim still lacks the same absolute power held by his father.
Kim, the analyst, said that Jang's execution and frequent personnel reshuffles that Kim Jong Un has undertaken over the past two years show that the young leader doesn't appear to have confidence in who to trust as he reshapes the government dotted with people from his father's era.
"Dictators always feel uneasy," he said.
- AP