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Home / World

South Korean Daily says that Kim Jong Un executed and purged top nuclear negotiators

By Choe Sang-Hun
New York Times·
31 May, 2019 03:14 AM5 mins to read

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Kim Hyok-chol, left, the special envoy to the United States, during summit preparations in Hanoi, Vietnam, in February. Photo / AP

Kim Hyok-chol, left, the special envoy to the United States, during summit preparations in Hanoi, Vietnam, in February. Photo / AP

North Korea has executed its special envoy to the United States on spying charges, as its leader, Kim Jong Un, has engineered a sweeping purge of the country's top nuclear negotiators after the breakdown of his second summit with President Donald Trump, a major South Korean daily reported Friday.

Kim Hyok Chol, the envoy, was executed by firing squad in March at the Mirim airfield in a suburb of Pyongyang, the North Korean capital, Chosun Ilbo, South Korea's largest daily, reported Friday, citing an anonymous source. Kim Hyok Chol faced the charge that he was "won over by the American imperialists to betray the supreme leader," the newspaper said.

Four officials of the North Korean Foreign Ministry were also executed, the South Korean daily reported, without providing any hint of who its source might have been or how it obtained the information.

South Korean officials would not immediately confirm or comment on the Chosun Ilbo report. North Korea has not reported any execution or purge of top officials in recent months. The country remains the world's most isolated, and outside intelligence agencies have sometimes failed to figure out or have misinterpreted what was going on in the closely guarded inner circles of the country's leader, Kim Jong Un.

But some signs in recent weeks have led analysts in South Korea to speculate that Kim may be engineering a reshuffle or a purge of his negotiating team in the wake of the summit, held in February in Hanoi, Vietnam. The meeting was widely seen as a huge embarrassment for Kim, who is supposedly seen as infallible in his totalitarian state.

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On Thursday, Rodong Sinmun, the official newspaper of the North's ruling Workers' Party, carried a commentary warning against "anti-party, anti-revolutionary acts" of officials who "pretend to work for the supreme leader in his presence but secretly harbor other dreams behind his back."

"Such characters won't escape the stern judgment from the revolution," the North Korean newspaper said. North Korean state media has issued such warnings when it needed to engineer a political purge or warn against possible lagging loyalty among the elites, South Korean analysts said.

Chosun Ilbo, the South Korean newspaper, reported Friday that Kim Yong Chol, a senior Workers' Party vice chairman who visited the White House as the main point man for diplomacy with the United States, had also been purged, sentenced to forced labor in a remote northern province.

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Also sent to a prison camp was Kim Song Hye, a senior female nuclear negotiator who teamed up with Kim Hyok Chol in working-level negotiations ahead of the Kim-Trump summit, the South Korean newspaper said. North Korea even sent a summit translator to a prison camp for committing a translation mistake, it said.

Kim Yong-chol, left, a senior Workers' Party vice chairman, and Kim Song-hye, a senior nuclear negotiator, with President Trump at the White House last year. Photo / AP
Kim Yong-chol, left, a senior Workers' Party vice chairman, and Kim Song-hye, a senior nuclear negotiator, with President Trump at the White House last year. Photo / AP

During the Hanoi summit, Kim demanded that Trump lift the most painful international sanctions against his country in return for partially dismantling his country's nuclear weapons facilities. The meeting collapsed when Trump rejected the proposal, insisting on a quick and comprehensive rollback of the North's entire weapons of mass destruction program before lifting sanctions.

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Kim took a long train ride to Hanoi to meet Trump, and North Korean state media reported high expectations for the summit. But Kim had to return home empty-handed, without the sanctions relief that he badly needed to help ease his country's deepening economic isolation.

Outside analysts have since wondered whether Kim's negotiating team had failed to prepare him for such a breakdown in the talks or considered how Kim might react.

Kim Hyok Chol was appointed as North Korea's special envoy only weeks before the Hanoi summit and had led pre summit working-level negotiations with Stephen Biegun, Trump's special envoy on North Korea.

Their negotiations could not narrow wide differences between their governments over the terms under which North Korea would give up its nuclear arsenal. As a consequence, Kim and Trump met without having crafted a draft agreement, as the negotiators from both sides left it to their leaders to sort out the thorniest problems that have bedevilled negotiations for decades.

Kim Yong Chol, the Workers' Party leader, has seemed to disappear from state news media in recent weeks. Although he retained some of his top posts during a parliamentary meeting in April, he was replaced as head of the United Front Department, a key party agency in charge of relations with South Korea and the North's intelligence affairs.

Both Kim Hyok Chol and Kim Yong Chol were absent from the North Korean delegation when Kim Jong Un met last month with President Vladimir Putin of Russia. In their places were senior officials from North Korea's Foreign Ministry, like Minister Lee Yong Ho and First Vice Minister Choe Son Hui, who have emerged as the new faces of North Korean diplomacy.

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Kim has said he will give Washington until the end of the year to make a new denuclearisation proposal he can accept, or he may abandon his diplomacy with Trump. As if to press the point, North Korea has recently resumed tests of short-range missiles.

Even Kim Jong Un's sister and adviser, Kim Yo Jong, did not accompany Kim to the meeting with Putin, although she has been a fixture in high-profile summits with U.S., Chinese and South Korean leaders.

Chosun Ilbo said the sister may have been reprimanded by Kim or may be sick with pneumonia.

Since taking power seven years ago, Kim Jong Un has engineered a series of political purges to remove or execute many of the top officials who had served under his late father, Kim Jong Il, and consolidate his own leadership. The most prominent victim has been Jang Song Thaek, Kim's uncle, who was executed in the Mirim airfield in 2013 on charges of corruption and plotting a military coup against Kim.

Written by: Choe Sang-Huni

© 2019 THE NEW YORK TIMES

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