North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un has pushed out a high-profile military figure who once played a key role under his late father – the latest in a series of top-level personnel changes.
The Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) identified a new figure, Jon Chang-Bok, as first vice-minister of the People’s Armed Forces Ministry in a report yesterday which detailed Kim’s trip to an army food-processing factory.
The People’s Armed Forces Ministry is essentially the defence ministry and comes under the control of the powerful National Defence Commission.
KCNA did not say when Jon, a relatively little-known figure, was appointed to the post, but he replaces Vice Marshal Hyon Chol-Hae.
Hyon, 79, was regarded as one of the North’s top military figures who helped support the young leader following the death of his father, Kim Jong-Il, in December 2011.
But Jong-Un has reshuffled his military top brass in an apparent attempt to secure his leadership since taking over the reins of power.
In changes disclosed on Sunday, Jang Jong-Nam, a relatively young field commander believed to be in his mid-50s, replaced hawkish defence minister Kim Kyok-Sik.
Kim Kyok-Sik, appointed six months ago, had been seen as a hardline choice given that he was widely believed to have directed the 2010 shelling of a South Korean border island.
Jang, who will now have Jon as his number-two, is not the most senior figure in the Korean military. The National Defence Commission is chaired by Kim Jong-Un as supreme commander.
And despite the shake-up, other old-guard figures remain in influential positions in the commission and other leadership bodies.
The changes come as the Korean peninsula emerges from a period of highly elevated military tensions that followed the North’s nuclear test in February.