North Korea has carried out the execution of a vice premier, a Seoul government official said Wednesday, as the North's leader moves to further strengthen his reign of terror.
The official said North Korea executed the 63-year-old Kim Yong-jin by firing squad last month after he was accused of showing a bad attitude when attending a key parliamentary meeting held in late June.
He was shot after being branded an anti-revolutionary element.
He was interrogated by the North's ministry on state security before being executed, he added.
The official said the North sent Kim Yong-chol, 71, the head of the United Front Department, to a rural farm for one month of re-education in mid-July as he showed a "heavy-handed" attitude and abused his power.
"As Kim will be more inclined to show his loyalty (to the North's leader) after (re-education), so the government is keeping close tabs on the possibility that North Korea would show a more hardline attitude toward South Korea," the official said.
Choe Hwi, a 61-year-old a vice department director of the ruling party's central committee, has also been undergoing re-education in a rural area since late May, the official added.
The North's leader has ordered the execution of many government and military officials, including his once-powerful uncle Jang Song-thaek, as he seeks to consolidate his oppressive rule. In May last year, then defense chief Hyon Yong-chol was executed. (Yonhap)
Choe Hwi, a 61-year-old a vice department director of the ruling party's central committee, has also been undergoing re-education in a rural area since late May, the official added.
The North's leader has ordered the execution of many government and military officials, including his once-powerful uncle Jang Song-thaek, as he seeks to consolidate his oppressive rule. In May last year, then defense chief Hyon Yong-chol was executed. (Yonhap)