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An 'executed' North Korean general has just got a promotion

Ri Yong-Gil, believed executed in February, has been named to a senior position within the ruling communist party.

pa1 File picture of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un, right, and Ri Yong-Gil, the former head of North Korea's military PA PA

NORTH KOREA’S FORMER military chief of staff who was reported executed earlier this year is apparently alive and well after being named to a number of senior ruling party posts.

Intelligence reports in South Korea had suggested Ri Yong-Gil, former chief of the Korean People’s Army (KPA) General Staff, was executed in February on accusations of corruption and forming a political faction.

Although the reports were never confirmed by Pyongyang, North Korea named a new chief of staff, Ri Myong-Su, in the same month.

The change came at a time of highly elevated tensions on the divided Korean peninsula following the North’s nuclear test in January and long-range rocket launch.

But on Tuesday, Ri Yong-Gil’s name appeared on a list of the newly-elected members of the Workers’ Party of Korea (WPK) Central Committee, as an alternate member of the politburo and a member of the party’s central military commission.

Koreas Intelligence Blunder Ri Yong-Gil, pictured in May 2013 Kim Kwang Hyon Kim Kwang Hyon

Yong-Gil’s appointments were detailed in official state media accounts of the ruling Worker’s Party Congress in Rodong Simmun, the official newspaper of the party’s central committee.

Reports – some confirmed, some not – of purges, executions and disappearances have been common since Kim Jong-Un took power following the death of his father Kim Jong-Il in December 2011.

A large number of senior officials, especially military cadres, were removed or demoted as the young leader sought to solidify his control over the powerful army.

In the most high-profile case, Kim had his influential uncle, Jang Song-Thaek, executed in December 2013 for charges including treason and corruption.

© – AFP, 2016

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