North
Korea's defence minister has been publicly executed with an anti-aircraft gun
for falling asleep during military meetings and answering back to leader Kim
Jong-Un.
Hyon
Yong-Chol, 66, who was named head of North Korea's military in 2012, was killed
in front of hundreds of bloodthirsty officials at a military camp in the
capital Pyongyang on April 30.
It is
not the first time a ZPU-4 anti-aircraft gun has been used for executions in
North Korea, with recently released satellite images showing a number of
unidentified people being killed using the brutal method at the same camp last
October.
Han Ki-Beom, deputy director of South Korea's National Intelligence Agency, told a parliamentary committee that hundreds of officials watched the execution in Pyongyang on April 30.
The
intelligence service told politicians that Hyon was killed by an anti-aircraft
gun at Kang Kon Military Academy - a method cited in various unconfirmed
reports as being reserved for senior officials who the leadership wishes to
make examples of.
Hyon
was apparently caught falling asleep during formal military events and is said
to have also spoken back to Kim Jong-Un on several occasions.
Lawmaker
Shin Kyoung-min, who attended the parliamentary briefing during which news of
the execution was announced, said the NIS believed it to be true.
Hong
Hyun-ik, chief researcher at the Sejong Institute, a security think tank based
in Seoul, told local broadcaster YTN that the anti-artillery gun used would
have left the body utterly unrecognizable.
'Because
there are several guns bound together, it would be hard to find the body after
firing it once. It's really gruesome. What they did would have ripped all his
flesh off, done in the manner of 'let's see what sort of punishment this
is.'
The
execution was initially reported by South Korea's Yonhap news agency, although
reports from North Korea are impossible to independently confirm.
The
lawmakers said Hyon was executed at a firing range at the Kanggon Military
Training Area, which is located 14 miles north of the capital Pyongyang.
The
satellite pictures revealed for the first time that Kim's regime were using
anti-aircraft weapons to brutally execute people in front on hundreds of
people.
The
images, which have been released by the Committee for Human Rights in North
Korea and AllSource Analysis, were taken in October last year.
They
appear to show six ZPU-4 anti-aircraft guns being used to shoot a line of
people stood 100 yards away, with a viewing platform located nearby.
Outraged
critics said the victims would have been 'pulverised' by the artillery fire, in
what they described as the latest example of brutality employed by the dictator
to suppress his own people.
Hyon
was last known to have spoken publicly at a security conference in Moscow in
April, but is said to have shown disrespect to Kim by dozing off at a
subsequent military event.
He was
also believed to have stood up to and publicly complained about Kim, and had
not ignored official orders on multiple occasions, according to the lawmakers.
Hyon
is understood to have been arrested late last month and executed three days
later without legal proceedings.
Hyon
is believed to have been a military general since 2010 and served on the
committee for late leader Kim Jong-il's funeral in December 2011, before
becoming defence minister.
In
North Korea, the defence minister is mainly in charge of logistics and international
exchanges.
Policy-making is handled by the powerful National Defence Commission and the party Central Military Commission.
Since
taking power upon the death of his dictator father in late 2011, Kim Jong Un
has orchestrated a series of purges in apparent efforts to bolster his grip on
power.
Experts
on North Korea said there was no sign of instability in Pyongyang, but there
could be if the purges continued.
Kim
ordered the execution of 15 senior officials this year as punishment for
challenging his authority, according to the NIS. In all, around 70 officials
have been executed since Kim took over after his father's death in 2011, Yonhap
news agency cited the NIS as saying.
Analysts
are split on whether the bloody power shifts indicate a young leader in firm
control, or someone still struggling to establish himself.
'North Korean internal politics is very volatile these days. Internally, there does not seem to be any respect for Kim Jong Un within the core and middle levels of the North Korean leadership,' said Michael Madden, an expert on the country's leadership and contributor to the 38 North think tank.
'There
is no clear or present danger to Kim Jong Un's leadership or regime stability,
but if this continues to happen into next year, then we should seriously start
to think about revising our scenarios on North Korea,' he added.
Koh
Yu-hwan, a North Korea leadership expert at Dongguk University in Seoul, said
the regime could 'reach its limit' if Kim's purges continued, but added: 'it's
still too early to tell.'
North
Korea is one of the most insular countries in the world and its ruling power
structure is highly opaque. The current leader is the third generation of the
Kim family that has ruled with near-absolute power since the country was
established in 1948.
In
2013, Kim purged and executed his uncle, Jang Song Thaek, once considered the
second most powerful man in Pyongyang's leadership circle, for factionalism and
committing crimes damaging to the economy, along with a group of officials
close to him.
Culled from DailyMail UK.
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