City
Epaper

North Korea leader's sister confirmed director of ruling party's general affairs dept

By IANS | Updated: February 28, 2026 09:25 IST

Seoul, Feb 28 Kim Yo-jong, the powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, was confirmed to have ...

Open in App

Seoul, Feb 28 Kim Yo-jong, the powerful sister of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, was confirmed to have taken the post of director of the general affairs department of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea (WPK), according to state media on Saturday.

Kim was promoted to a party department chief at the WPK's plenary meeting on Monday, held in the midst of the ninth party congress that concluded a weeklong run on Wednesday, but details of her official title were not disclosed at that time.

But the North's state media called her "director of the General Affairs Department of the WPK Central Committee" for the first time in its Saturday report, listing her as one of the major party cadres and military commanders who received a new type of sniper rifle from the North's leader as "special gifts."

The North's leader met with major leading cadres and military commanding officers at the headquarters building of the WPK the previous day and gave the "new-generation" sniper rifle to each of them, reports Yonhap, quoting the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA).

Kim Yo-jong, formerly the vice director of the party's propaganda and agitation department, mostly issued messages toward South Korea and the United States. In particular, she issued sharp-tongued statements targeting Seoul amid strained inter-Korean ties.

With the new title, her authority in the party is widely expected to become greater by leading the department deemed to handle the WPK's internal operations and administrative affairs.

The KCNA said Jo Yong-won and Kim Jae-ryong, members of the praesidium of the political bureau of the WPK central committee, were also presented rifles by the North's leader, along with members of the Central Military Commission and key military officers.

"These presents represent my appraisal of your extraordinary devotion to the country and the people and an expression of my absolute trust in you," Kim said, calling the sniper's rifle a "wonderful weapon."

The North's leader also personally awarded weapon certificates to each of them and shot the rifle with the leading cadres at a firing range, the KCNA said.

Meanwhile, photos carried by state media showed Kim's daughter Ju-ae attending the ceremony to present the rifles and take part in a shooting practice session.

In a rare move, the North's media disclosed a solo photo of Ju-ae taking aim at a target and shooting a rifle.

Earlier this month, South Korea's spy agency said Ju-ae may be positioned to succeed her father as state leader. The party congress had drawn attention over whether Ju-ae would receive a formal title at the party event, but she only publicly appeared at a military parade on Wednesday night to mark the first party congress in five years.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

TechnologyIndustrial and warehousing demand in India sees 22 pc growth in Jan-March

BusinessIndustrial and warehousing demand in India sees 22 pc growth in Jan-March

NationalMumbai: 400-tonne crane tilts at BKC during Metro 2B work, no injuries reported

NationalUnruly conduct by workers may lead to blacklisting of agencies, warns UP govt

International"Iran will become a footnote": Trump's top aide Miller on US's blockade on ports of Tehran

International Realted Stories

InternationalVirgin Australia cuts domestic flights amid rising fuel costs

InternationalTwo ships transit Hormuz for Iranian ports despite US blockade: Report

International"Middle East, Persian Gulf "a crisis knot that will be very difficult to untie," says Russian FM Lavrov

InternationalAmbedkar’s constitutional morality can strengthen multilateralism in fragmented world: P Harish

InternationalNew B-21 Raider stealth bomber to reduce mid-flight refuelling demand, free up tanker assets and boost US deterrence: USAF