Illustration of Kim Yo-jong speaking at the Workers' Party congress podium following her promotion to department head.
Illustration of Kim Yo-jong speaking at the Workers' Party congress podium following her promotion to department head.
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Kim Yo-jong promoted to Workers' Party department head

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Kim Yo-jong, the powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, has been promoted to department head at the ruling Workers' Party of Korea during the ongoing party congress. According to the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), she was previously a vice department director and was reelected as an alternate member of the central committee's political bureau. Seoul's unification ministry is closely watching whether her new role involves handling relations with South Korea or external strategies.

The first plenary meeting of the ninth central committee of North Korea's Workers' Party of Korea promoted Kim Yo-jong to department head. The Korean Central News Agency (KCNA) reported on Tuesday that she was named one of 17 newly elected department directors of the party's new central committee. She had previously served as vice department director. The KCNA did not specify which department she will head, but experts presume it could be the propaganda department, where she has been working. In her new role, she is likely to oversee inter-Korean relations or external strategies.

The plenary meeting took place the previous day as part of the ongoing party congress, which began last Thursday to review policy outcomes from the 2021 congress and establish goals for the next five years. At the meeting, Kim Yo-jong was also reelected as an alternate member of the central committee's political bureau, returning to the position after five years.

The session expanded the party's secretariat from seven to 11 members, possibly adding positions for international affairs, with Kim Song-nam, chief of the international affairs department, newly appointed as a secretary. A Seoul unification ministry official said the large-scale leadership changes appear aimed at promoting a generational shift and solidifying Kim Jong-un's state leadership and the party's guidance.

Jo Yong-won, the party secretary for organization and one of Kim's closest aides, retained his seat on the politburo presidium but was removed as secretary. This move is likely a step toward his appointment as chairman of the standing committee of North Korea's Supreme People's Assembly, following Choe Ryong-hae's earlier relief from the post at the congress. After the congress concludes, North Korea is expected to form a new parliament and pursue constitutional revisions or other measures to reflect the party meeting's results.

The KCNA report indicated the politburo presidium consists of Kim Jong-un, Jo Yong-won, Premier Pak Thae-song, and party secretaries Kim Jae-ryong and Ri Il-hwan. Kim Song-gi, appointed to the Party Politburo and Central Military Commission, appears to have taken over as director of the General Political Bureau of the Korean People's Army after his predecessor Jong Kyong-thaek's departure. The personnel decisions did not include Ju-ae, Kim's daughter, who has been assessed as a likely heir.

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Initial reactions on X to Kim Yo-jong's promotion to a department head in North Korea's Workers' Party during the party congress are limited but diverse. Analysts note it as an elevation of a key generational ally to the leadership. Some users express concern, calling her the 'most dangerous woman in North Korea' gaining more power. Pro-regime or satirical accounts congratulate her. South Korean users report it as breaking news amid ongoing tensions.

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North Korean official Jang Kum-chol at podium issuing stern warning to South Korea amid drone incursion tensions.
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North Korean official calls Kim Yo-jong's statement clear warning to South Korea

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A North Korean first vice foreign minister described Kim Yo-jong's statement on South Korea as a 'clear warning,' dismissing Seoul's positive assessment as a 'wishful interpretation.' The remarks by Jang Kum-chol follow President Lee Jae Myung's expression of regret over drone incursions into the North. He urged South Korea to acknowledge its wrongdoing and refrain from approaching North Korea.

North Korean leader Kim Jong-un called for a greater role for young people in achieving national development during a meeting with participants of the country's largest youth group. The call came Saturday following the 11th congress of the Socialist Patriotic Youth League last week. State media KCNA reported Kim praising the youth's patriotism and combat efficiency.

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North Korea has convened meetings of ruling party committees under government ministries to discuss implementing decisions from last month's parliamentary session. Expanded plenary meetings advanced pledges made by leader Kim Jong-un to the Supreme People's Assembly. State media reported this on Wednesday.

North Korea is set to hold the first session of its new Supreme People's Assembly on Sunday, amid attention on whether it will codify its hostile policy toward South Korea in the constitution. The session follows the selection of new deputies after the Ninth Congress of the Workers' Party of Korea last month.

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