SEOUL (Reuters) - A senior
North Korean official, believed to be the No. 2 in the country after
leader Kim Jong Un, has reappeared in official television footage,
belying reports he had fallen victim to a fresh purge in the isolated
nation.
Choe Ryong Hae
was pictured close to Kim in pictures taken in January and February,
smiling but sporting a limp. He was seen enthusiastically taking notes
on a visit by Kim to various sites and then appeared at a firing drill
on a beach.
Choe is the
influential head of the political wing of North Korea's military and
appears to have risen to become the second most powerful person in the
country after the execution of Jang Song Thaek, Kim's uncle, last year.
Speculation in recent weeks that Choe had also been purged triggered a
wave of speculation that Kim was intent on shaking up North Korea's
elite and that competing factions around the 31-year old leader were a
destabilizing force in the North.
Choe's father was a partisan who fought alongside the young Kim's grandfather Kim Il Sung, the founder of North Korea.
In addition to the public title as the chief political operative for
the North's 1.2-million-strong army, Choe holds a seat in the powerful
standing committee of the ruling Workers' Party politburo shared only by
Kim himself and two figurehead old guard members.
Choe is also one of the two vice chairmen of the ruling Workers' Party
central military commission, a post that encompasses two of the most
powerful institutions, the party and the military. He was made a vice
marshal of the military this year.
In June, Choe was Kim's special envoy to meet President Xi Jinping of
China, North Korea's only major ally. The meeting followed displeasure
expressed by Beijing after North Korea launched a missile last year and
conducted a third nuclear test.
There are frequent reports in South Korean and other media of the
demise or fall from grace of top officials in North Korea, a closed
nuclear- armed state.
"The
Choe imprisonment rumor tells that it is hard to find out exactly what
is happening inside North Korea.. and it is a problem to report
information based on unreliable rumors from a source far away from
Pyongyang," said Cheong Seong-chang, a North Korea expert at the Sejong
Institute thinktank near Seoul.
(Reporting by David Chance; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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