Kim Ki-nam | |
Office: | Director of the Propaganda and Agitation Department of the Workers' Party of Korea |
Term Start: | April 1989 |
Term End: | 9 October 2017 |
Leader: | Kim Il Sung Kim Jong Il Kim Jong Un |
Deputy: | Ri Jae-il Kim Yo-jong |
Predecessor: | ? |
Successor: | Pak Kwang-ho |
Birth Date: | 28 August 1929 |
Birth Place: | Chōsen, Empire of Japan |
Death Place: | Ponghwa Clinic, Pyongyang |
Resting Place: | Patriotic Martyrs' Cemetery |
Party: | Workers' Party of Korea |
Module: | |
Native Name Lang: | ko |
Kim Ki-nam (; 28 August 1929 – 7 May 2024) was a North Korean official. He served as Vice Chairman (previously Secretary) of the Workers' Party of Korea,[5] and Director of the Propaganda and Agitation Department from 1989 until 2017,[6] responsible for coordinating the country's press, media, fine arts, and publishing to support government policy. He was also a vice-chairman of the Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of the Fatherland,[7] in which capacity he led numerous visits to the South, and served several terms in the Supreme People's Assembly, to which he was first elected in November 1977.[8]
Kim Ki-nam was born in Anda, Heilongjiang, China on 28 August 1929.
A graduate from the Kim Il-sung University and Soviet party schools, at first he worked in foreign affairs (being North Korea's ambassador to Beijing in the early 1950s) before moving to the Propaganda and Agitation Department where he became deputy director in 1966.[9] In 1974, he was appointed editor of the Party's theoretical magazine, Kulloja, and in 1976 he was promoted to editor-in-chief of Rodong Sinmun. He is credited with having produced articles and essays creating the cult of Kim Jong-il and praising Kim Il-sung's historic role.[10] He was elected to the 6th Central Committee at the 6th Party Congress in October 1980, director of the Propaganda and Agitation Department in April 1985 and simultaneously secretary for propaganda and party history in 1992.
Kim Ki-nam was the party's propaganda boss and key author of the country's political slogans during Kim Jong-il's regime. He was given a role in ensuring Kim Jong-un's succession drive[10] and appointed to the 6th Politburo in September 2010.
He was one of the very few North Korean officials to have visited South Korea, leading a funeral delegation in 2009 after the death of president Kim Dae-jung.[11]
He was also one of the only two civilian officials who accompanied Kim Jong-il's coffin during his funeral in December 2011, the other being Choe Thae-bok.
He was given a seat in the State Affairs Commission in June 2016 when it was established. He was replaced in October 2017 by Pak Kwang-ho in all his functions at a Central Committee plenum due to his retirement.[11]
In 2016, he was placed under sanctions by the United States government.[12]
Kim was hospitalized with multiple organ failure in April 2022, and died on 7 May 2024 at the age of 94.[13] [14]