SEOUL (Reuters) - North Korea's vice premier was executed by firing
squad this year after showing discontent with the policies of the
country's leader Kim Jong Un, a South Korean media report said on
Wednesday.
Yonhap News Agency cited an
unnamed source as saying that the 63-year-old Choe Yong Gon, a former
delegate for North-South cooperation, was executed, marking another
death of a senior official in a series of high-level purges since Kim
Jong Un took charge in late 2011.
The
Yonhap report said Choe had expressed disagreement with Kim's forestry
policies in May and had shown poor work performance. It provided no
further details.
South
Korea's Unification Ministry, which handles the country's ties with
North Korea, said in a text message received by Reuters that Choe had
not been spotted in public for about eight months, and that it was
closely monitoring the situation.
South Korea's National Intelligence Service declined to comment on the report to Reuters.
The
South Korean spy agency told lawmakers in May that North Korea had
executed its defense chief by putting him in front of an anti-aircraft
gun at a firing range.
Choe was appointed vice-premier last year, North Korea's state-run KCNA news agency reported previously.
Yonhap said the source also said the reclusive state had publicly executed a senior Workers' Party official in September.
Choe
had worked on inter-Korean affairs in 2000s, leading the North's
delegation in joint economic cooperation committees with South Korea
between 2003 and 2005.
He
attended the 2004 opening ceremony of the Kaesong Industrial Complex, a
factory park jointly run with Seoul that is the last remaining joint
project of the two countries.
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