The Guardian (USA)

North Korean envoy defects in possible sign that Kim's power base is 'drifting'

- Reuters in Seoul

North Korea’s acting ambassador to Kuwait has defected to South Korea in the latest high-profile escape from the isolated country.

Ryu Hyun-woo had led North Korea’s embassy in Kuwait since the former ambassador So Chang-sik was expelled after a 2017 UN resolution sought to scale back the country’s overseas diplomatic missions.

Ryu defected to South Korea last September, according to Tae Yong-ho, who was North Korea’s deputy ambassador to Britain before settling in the South in 2016 and being elected as a lawmaker last year.

Kuwait has been a key source of foreign currency for Pyongyang, which sent thousands of labourers there, mostly for constructi­on projects.

Tae said Ryu is the son-in-law of Jon Il-chun, who once oversaw a Worker’s party bureau responsibl­e for managing the ruling Kim family’s secret coffers, known as Room 39.

South Korea’s National Intelligen­ce Service declined to comment.

Ryu’s defection could be a sign that the North Korean elite who shore up leader Kim Jong-un’s power base has been drifting away from him slowly but constantly, Tae said.

Ryu fled several months after Jo Song-gil, who was North Korea’s acting ambassador to Italy, vanished with his wife from the embassy and resurfaced in South Korea.

Tae told Reuters the knowledge and experience­s of the outside world gained as a diplomat had fostered disillusio­nment among his family, and he decided to escape to “give freedom” to his children, calling for other officials to follow suit.

“I want to deliver to my colleagues working around the world and North Korean elites that there is an alternativ­e to North Korea, and the door is open,” Tae said in an interview.

 ?? Photograph: ௉ળ௪৶ऀ/AP ?? Defection could be sign that the North Korean elite who shore up power base of country’s leader, Kim Jong-un, pictured, has been drifting away from him slowly but constantly, says politician.
Photograph: ௉ળ௪৶ऀ/AP Defection could be sign that the North Korean elite who shore up power base of country’s leader, Kim Jong-un, pictured, has been drifting away from him slowly but constantly, says politician.

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