Chu Yong-ha explained

Office:Vice Chairman of the Workers' Party of Korea Central Committee
1Blankname:Chairman
1Namedata:Kim Tu-bong
Convocation:1st Central Committee
Term Start:30 August 1946
Term End:9 September 1948
Alongside:Kim Il Sung
Office1:Minister of Transportation
Premier1:Kim Il Sung
Term Start1:9 September 1948
Term End1:October 1948
Predecessor1:Post established
Successor1:Pak Ui-wan
Nationality:Korean
Module:
Hangul:주영하
Hanja:朱寧河
Rr:Ju Yeongha
Mr:Chu Yŏngha
Context:north
Child:yes

Chu Yong-ha (; pronounced as /ko/; 1908 – ?) was a North Korean politician and diplomat. Chu was elected into several posts in the Workers' Party of North Korea, the predecessor of the Workers' Party of Korea, in its early days. Chu was the target of plots ensuing from factional strife within the party. As a member of the Domestic faction, Chu was opposed by the Guerrilla, Soviet and Yan'an factions.

During the Korean War, Chu was North Korea's ambassador to Moscow. After the war, a fictitious plot against Kim Il Sung was "uncovered" in a show trial. Among the claims against the defendants was overthrowing Kim Il Sung and making Pak Hon-yong the new premier, and Chu one of his vice-premiers.

Biography

Chu was born in 1908.[1]

Chu was part of the Political Committee of the Workers' Party of North Korea that was founded in August 1946 as a compromise between rivaling factions of communists on the orders of the Soviets. Chu represented the Domestic faction in the newly formed party.[2]

In the First Congress of the party on 28–30 August 1946, Chu was elected to the Political Committee (Politburo) of the first Central Committee of the party. On the same occasion, Chu was elected vice-chairman of the Secretariat of the party.[3] Chu presided over the session on 30 August. In addition, Chu was elected vice-chairman of the party, along with Kim Il Sung in the first plenum of the Central Committee on 31 August.

In the Second Congress of the party, 27–30 March 1948, Chu was re-elected to the Political Committee of the second Central Committee. Chu presided over the session on 27 March. Chu was re-elected vice-chairman in a plenum of the second Central Committee on 31 March.Chu compromised with the Kim Il Sung faction, but remained a supporter of Pak Hon-yong. On September 1948, when the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (North Korea) was officially proclaimed, Chu was appointed to the Minister of Transport in the North Korean Cabinet headed by Premier Kim Il Sung.[4] In the third plenum of the second Central Committee, on 24–25 September 1948, Ho Ka-i replaced Chu as the vice-chairman of the party as well as the chairman of the inspection committee.

The organ of the North Korean government, Minju Choson, criticized Chu for defending former members of the Workers' Party of South Korea who had stayed in the North. Kim Il Sung's Guerrilla faction, together with the Soviet and Yan'an factions, sought to remove Chu as well.[5]

During the Korean War, Chu was the North Korean ambassador to Moscow.[6]

In the show trial of Ri Sung-yop and 12 other defendants in August 1953 just after the end of the Korean War, a fictitious conspiracy was revealed. According to the accusers, the conspirators planned overthrowing Kim Il Sung and making Pak Hon-yong the premier. Chu was to accompany Chang Si-u as Pak's vice-premiers.[7]

See also

References

Works cited

Notes and References

  1. Encyclopedia: ko:주영하. Chu Yong-ha. . 12 December 2015 . http://encykorea.aks.ac.kr/Contents/Index?contents_id=E0053365 . ko .
  2. Book: Jürgen Kleiner. Korea, a Century of Change. 1 January 2001. World Scientific. 978-981-279-995-1. 276.
  3. Soviet Policy in North Korea . Alexander Kim . World Politics . 22. 2 . January 1970 . 10.2307/2009863 . 252 . 2009863 . 154760833 .
  4. http://newslibrary.naver.com/viewer/index.nhn?articleId=1948091100329201019 北韓組閣完了(북한조각완료) 동아일보 1948-09-11 1면
  5. The Post-War Politics of Communist Korea . Glenn D. Paige . Dong-jun Lee . The China Quarterly . 14 . June 1963 . 10.1017/S0305741000020993 . 20 . 154816371 .
  6. Book: Zhihua Shen. Mao, Stalin and the Korean War: Trilateral Communist Relations in the 1950s. 2012. Routledge. 978-0-415-51645-7. 242.
  7. Book: Lankov, Andrey. From Stalin to Kim Il Sung: The Formation of North Korea, 1945–1960. January 2002. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. 978-1-85065-563-3. 94–95.