Hwang Jang-yop

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Hwang Jang-yop
황장엽
File:Hwang Jang Yeop.jpg
Hwang in September 2009
Personal details
Born Hwang Jang-yop
February 17, 1923
Kangdong County, South Pyongan Province, Japanese Korea
Died October 10, 2010 (2010-10-11) (aged 87)
Seoul, South Korea
Nationality Korean
Political party Workers' Party of Korea (1946-1997)
Hwang Jang-yop
Hangul 황장엽
Hanja
Revised Romanization Hwang Jang-yeop
McCune–Reischauer Hwang Changyŏp

Hwang Jang-yop (Hangŭl: 황장엽; February 17, 1923 – October 10, 2010) was a North Korean politician who defected to South Korea in 1997, best known for being, to date, the highest-ranking North Korean defector.[1] He was largely responsible for crafting Juche, North Korea's official state ideology.

Early life and education

Hwang was born in Kangdong, South Pyongan Province. He graduated from the Pyongyang Commercial School in 1941, and then went to Tokyo in 1942 to attend Chuo University's law school; however, he quit two years later and returned to Pyongyang, where he taught mathematics at his alma mater. He joined the Workers Party of North Korea in 1946, soon after its founding; from 1949 to 1953, he was sent to study at Moscow University in the Soviet Union, where he met his wife Pak Sung-ok. Upon his return to North Korea, he became head lecturer in philosophy at Kim Il-sung University. He would later ascend to the presidency of that university in April 1965.

Career

In 1972, Hwang became Chairman of the Standing Committee of the Supreme People's Assembly, a position which he would hold for 11 years.[2]

Sometime in the late 1950s, Hwang discovered a 1955 speech in which Kim Il-Sung said, "Juche means Chosun's revolution" (Chosun being the traditional name for Korea). At the time, Kim wanted to develop his own version of Marxism-Leninism, and Hwang was largely responsible for developing what became known as "the Juche Idea." As part of this, he helped scrub all of the paeans to Joseph Stalin that had been typical of Kim's speeches in the 1940s and early 1950s. He also supervised the rewriting of Korean Communist history to make it look like Kim had been the founder and leader of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea from its inception.[3]

In 1983, however, he was removed from the Assembly and his standing deteriorated; though he had been Kim Jong-Il's teacher at Kim Il-sung University, Kim now spoke to him only to criticize him, specifically admonishing him for taking too close an interest in China's capitalist reforms.[4] Remarking on his role as advisor to Kim Jong-Il, Hwang stated: "When I proposed something, he would pretend to listen at first, but in the end, he would never listen." [5]

Defection

Hwang defected on the way back from a February 1997 trip to Tokyo by walking into the South Korean embassy in Beijing along with his aide Kim Duk-hong, the president of a North Korean trading firm in Beijing.[6][7] Pyongyang immediately threatened retaliation, while Beijing police sealed off the South Korean embassy.[8] Three days later, North Korean defector Ri Han-yong, the nephew of Kim Jong-il's mistress Song Hye-rim, was shot outside of his home in Bundang, Gyeonggi-do, South Korea by unknown assailants widely suspected to be North Korean Special Forces agents; South Korean prime minister Lee Soo-sung described the attack as retaliation for Hwang's defection.[9] A few days later, Kim Jong-Il was quoted on Radio Pyongyang as saying, "Cowards, leave if you want to. We will defend the red flag of revolution to the end", a message seen as marking acceptance of Hwang's defection.[10]

Chinese authorities eventually permitted Hwang to depart for South Korea via the Philippines several weeks later.[11] Considering Hwang's prominent role in the North Korean regime, his defection caused a stir, with The Washington Post saying it was as if Joseph Goebbels had defected from Nazi Germany.[3]

Since his defection, Hwang's wife committed suicide and one daughter died under mysterious circumstances by falling off a truck; his other children, a daughter and a son, as well his grandchildren, are thought to have been sent to labor camps.[4] After his arrival in the South, he became a harsh critic of North Korea, publishing over 12 books and treatises, many of which accused Kim Jong-il of "betraying juche and building feudalism instead of socialism", and used his position as chairman of the Unification Policy Research Institute to spread his message. However, under the Sunshine Policy of president Kim Dae-jung, who took office in 1998, Hwang found himself increasingly marginalised; in November 2000, he was removed from the chairmanship of the Unification Policy Research Institute, leading him to complain that the South Korean government wanted him to stay quiet so as not to upset the North.[11]

Hwang contributed to the Daily NK, an online newspaper set up by South Koreans with North Korean staff.[12] He described his feelings surrounding the defection in the paper.[13][14]

In April 2010, the National Intelligence Service announced that it had arrested two North Korean agents who had allegedly been sent to assassinate Hwang.[15] The two agents had reportedly trained for four years in preparation for their mission. They had posed as defectors, but were discovered during questioning by South Korean authorities. They claimed that they would receive assistance from North Korean sympathisers in the South, but refused to give any names when questioned. Hwang commented on the assassination attempt, "Death is just death. There is no difference from dying of old age or being killed by Kim Jong-il."[16] In June 2010, South Korea sentenced the two would-be assassins to 10 years in prison.[17]

Death

Hwang was found dead in his home in Seoul, South Korea, on the morning of October 10, 2010. Initial reports stated that he died of a heart attack.[1] He died while bathing, and as such a large amount of water entered his lungs; however, an autopsy found no poison or drugs in his body, and footage from surveillance cameras showed no signs of forcible entry. On those grounds, the Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency (SMPA) stated that there was no evidence that his death might be homicide, and that they would close their investigation. On 20 October, just shortly after Hwang's death, the SMPA announced that it had arrested another would-be assassin of Hwang, Ri Dong Sam, who had also entered South Korea posing as a North Korean defector; however, the charges had no connection to Hwang's death.[18]

Bibliography

Hwang published 20 books since his defection to South Korea:[19]

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References

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  5. National Geographic: Inside North Korea on YouTube
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  14. Green, Chris. "A Quiet Voice Lost in the Shuffle," Daily NK, June 1, 2012. Accessed 2016-01-03.
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External links