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Choe Ik-gyu

Choe Ik-gyu (Korean최익규,[1] born 27 February 1934), also known under the pseudonym Choe Sang-gun, is a North Korean film director, propagandist, and politician.

Choe Ik-gyu
Born (1934-02-26) 26 February 1934 (age 90)
NationalityNorth Korean
EducationBaccalaureate, Kim Hyong Jik University of Education (1954); Red Flag Mangyongdae Revolutionary School
Occupation(s)Film director, politician
Years active1955–present
EmployerKorea Film Studio
Notable work
OfficeMinister of Culture
Term2003–2006
Political partyWorkers' Party of Korea
Korean name
Chosŏn'gŭl
최익규
Hancha
崔益奎
Revised RomanizationChoe Ik-gyu
McCune–ReischauerCh'oe Ik-kyu
Pseudonym
Chosŏn'gŭl
최상근
Revised RomanizationChoe Sang-geun
McCune–ReischauerCh'oe Sang-gŭn

Choe became the head of the Korea Film Studio in 1956 at age 22. By the time Kim Jong-il took over the country's film industry in 1968, Choe was the most experienced filmmaker of North Korea. Kim and Choe became close associates – Kim producing and Choe directing – a number of important North Korean films. Sea of Blood (1968) and The Flower Girl (1972) were "Immortal Classics" that, in addition to being popular successes, profoundly shaped the industry. By the end of the 1960s, Choe supervised film making in all of North Korea as the Propaganda and Agitation Department film section head. In 1972, his responsibilities covered other forms of North Korean propaganda as well after he was made the vice director of the Department.

In 1978, Kim had South Korea's famous director-actress couple Shin Sang-ok and Choi Eun-hee abducted to North Korea. Choe was tasked with aiding them to make films for North Korea. After Shin and Choi escaped in 1986 on a business trip in Vienna under Choe's watch, he was demoted. Kim Jong-il's trust in Choe would survive despite numerous incidents leading to the latter's dismissal from his posts. All in all, Choe has been sacked five times from the Propaganda and Agitation Department: first in 1969, then in 1977 as part of purges, in 1986 after the Vienna affair, in 1993, and finally 2010. He served as the country's Minister of Culture between 2003 and 2006. He finally became the head of the Propaganda and Agitation Department in 2009, but was replaced the following year. He remains a delegate to the Supreme People's Assembly.

Choe remained part of Kim's inner circle until the latter's death in 2011. Choe supported Kim's youngest son, Kim Jong-un's, ascension to the leadership of the country at a time when he was still an uncertain heir.

Early and personal life edit

Choe Ik-gyu was born on 26 February 1934 to a poor family in Hwadae County,[2][3] North Hamgyong Province, Korea.[2] Choe graduated with a baccalaureate from the department of Russian literature of Kim Hyong-jik Teachers' College in 1954,[3][2] and briefly became a lecturer of Russian at Kim Il-sung University's Pyongyang Labor Academy that same year.[3] Choe also studied in the Soviet Union and graduated from the Red Flag Mangyongdae Revolutionary School in Pyongyang, at some point.[4][5]

Choe is married and has a son and three daughters. His eldest daughter Choe Il-sim is an aspiring scenario writer, having written scripts for the five-part movie series The Country I Saw (1988–).[6][7]

Career edit

Choe began working at the Korea Film Studio,[4] first as a deputy film director in 1955 and then as an independent director.[3][2] He became the head of the studio in 1956 at the age of just 22.[4] As a filmmaker, he was largely self-taught but aspiring.[2] In addition to his formal education in arts, he now had much experience with the Stalinist model of making films in particular.[8] Choe's breakthrough was the 1963 film A Garden Zinnia.[2]

In 1968, Kim Jong-il, the country's future leader, took control of the country's film industry. Kim lacked experience in the field and so he teamed up with Choe,[9] who was much experienced by this time and was "arguably the single North Korean most knowledgeable about film, other than Kim".[4] Choe became Kim's closest partner in his activities related to film;[9] his "film tutor". Their collaborations became immensely popular, Choe directing and Kim producing films that would become known as "Immortal Classics" and People's Prize winners.[8][10] The first film Choe and Kim made together was Sea of Blood (1968),[8][11] followed by Five Guerilla Brothers the same year. By the end of the decade, Choe had been appointed as a supervisor of the film industry section of the Propaganda and Agitation Department of the ruling Workers' Party of Korea.[2]

 
Mass games in Pyongyang, a recurring propaganda spectacle developed by Choe

In 1972, Choe and Kim released The Flower Girl,[8] The film augmented Choe's position as Kim's close confidant, making him responsible for propaganda spectacles beyond film.[12] Choe was promoted as the vice director of the Propaganda and Agitation Department and elected a member of parliament in the fifth Supreme People's Assembly.[2] Choe was now in charge of events like Day of the Sun celebrations and Liberation Day marches. He developed mass games that would evolve into the Arirang Festival,[12] the organizing of which he is still overseeing.[13] Choe would also give artistic guidance to Korean revolutionary operas and plays.[2] For instance, he had directed an operatic adaption of Sea of Blood in 1971.[14] Choe and Kim's relationship became a close and long one. Choe would be personally involved in the making of many more films and supervising the production of others, such as multi-part The Star of Korea (1980–1987).[2]

Abduction of Shin Sang-ok and Choi Eun-hee edit

Deputy Director Choe is the right person to help bring about change in our film industry. He is well versed in motion pictures. He is the best man for this work... But, as you can see, Deputy Director Choe can't do it all by himself.

Kim Jong-il, explaining to Shin Sang-ok why he had been abducted, on a secret tape recorded by Shin[15]

Choe Ik-gyu played a role in the abduction of Shin Sang-ok and Choi Eun-hee, a famous South Korean director-actress couple.[16]

In a secret tape recorded by Shin and Choi, Kim Jong-il is heard confiding to the couple that he decided to kidnap them on the advice of Choe who considered Shin the best director of South Korea.[17]

After years of separation,[18] when Shin and Choi were re-united by their captor, Kim Jong-il, on 6 March 1983,[19] Choe was present. He would work with Shin from that point on to direct movies for Kim Jong-il.[20] He would pass on messages between Kim, Shin and Choi; the latter two rarely met Kim in person.[21]

First, Choe accompanied Shin and Choi on a trip from Pyongyang to Moscow, East Germany, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, and Yugoslavia.[22] The purpose of the trip was to scout for locations for the first film Shin had agreed to make for Kim Jong-il: An Emissary of No Return.[23] Choe was discontent with the project. He had been an acclaimed film director in his own right, but now he had to mind his South Korean counterpart.[24] Both Shin and Choi disliked Choe.[21] Choe resorted to criticizing Shin's directing in front of the crew.[24] Shin gained back control of the project by threatening to report to Kim Jong-il about Choe's behavior.[25] The film was finished and would be played at the London Film Festival and Shin was to attend.[26] Shin contemplated escaping there, but Choe and an entourage of bodyguards had traveled to London in advance.[27]

After Shin and Choi had managed to escape in Vienna, Choe was demoted from his position in the Propaganda and Agitation Department. He was sent into the countryside, his exact whereabouts unknown for years.[28]

Return to politics edit

 
Korean revolutionary opera, an art Choe has been involved in as a director and cultural administrator

Choe Ik-gyu was allowed to return as the vice director of the Propaganda and Agitation Department in 1988.[13] He assumed full control of the theater and operatic fields. That year, he was involved in making The Life of Chunhyang, an acclaimed folk opera. Choe guided performers "as if he were a stage director". Beginning with the early 1990s, Choe – credited under his pseudonym Choe Sang-geun – produced The Nation and Destiny. Choe produced, directed and wrote scenarios throughout the production of the 50-part film series, which Kim Jong-il considered the last work made under his personal guidance. Choe briefly fell out of public life in 1993 when he was dismissed from his Propaganda and Agitation Department post again. Even during this period, Kim Jong-il allowed him to travel to Germany to treat his health problems, which reflects the amount of trust Kim had in Choe.[6] All in all, Choe has been dismissed four times from the Propaganda and Agitation Department.[3]

Choe became the Minister of Culture in September 2003 but retired temporarily some two years later because of diabetes and other chronic health issues.[29] He relinquished the position in 2006.[16] Choe was elected to the 12th Supreme People's Assembly on 8 March 2009,[29] representing Electoral District#73.[16] He finally became the head of the Propaganda and Agitation Department in 2009. As the director of the Department,[16] Choe was one of North Korea's propaganda chiefs.[30] He was replaced by Kang Nung-su in early February 2010 for unknown reasons.[31]

Choe was often seen accompanying Kim Jong-il on formal occasions until the latter's death in 2011.[8] When traveling outside North Korea, Choe uses the name Choe Sang-geun.[2] Such was the case for instance when he visited Seoul in South Korea in 2000 in the capacity of the counsel to the National Orchestra of North Korea.[32]

Succession of Kim Jong-un edit

Choe was among those who vouched for the succession of Kim Jong-un at a time when his ascension to power remained uncertain.[33]

In addition to Kim Jong-il, Choe would aide Kim's third wife Ko Yong-hui, and Jang Song-thaek.[29]

Paul Fischer, the author of A Kim Jong-Il Production, assesses that "[t]he modern North Korean state, which is a production, a display performance of its own, owes as much to Choe Ik-Gyu's taste and talents as it does to Kim Jong-Il."[12]

Filmography edit

Opera edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Vantage Point. Vol. 5. Seoul: Naewoe Press. 1982. p. 24. OCLC 29800060.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m North Korea Handbook 2002, p. 185.
  3. ^ a b c d e Choe Ik-gyu. North Korea Leadership Watch 2009, p. 1.
  4. ^ a b c d Fischer 2016, p. 51.
  5. ^ Jeong Yong-soo (2 June 2009). "Sources: Kim chooses third son as heir". Korea JoongAng Daily. Retrieved 18 December 2017.
  6. ^ a b c North Korea Handbook 2002, p. 186.
  7. ^ Lewis, Jeffery (30 August 2012). "'The Country I Saw,' or 'How We Learned to Stop Worrying and Love North Korea's Bomb (Almost)'". 38 North. The US-Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies. Retrieved 19 December 2017.
  8. ^ a b c d e f Fischer 2016, p. 61.
  9. ^ a b Fischer 2016, p. 60.
  10. ^ Schönherr, Johannes (2012). North Korean Cinema: A History. Jefferson: McFarland. p. 47. ISBN 978-0-7864-6526-2.
  11. ^ a b Yoon, Keumsil Kim; Williams, Bruce (2015). Two Lenses on the Korean Ethos: Key Cultural Concepts and Their Appearance in Cinema. Jefferson: McFarland. p. 105. ISBN 978-0-7864-9682-2.
  12. ^ a b c Fischer 2016, p. 62.
  13. ^ a b Fischer 2016, p. 310.
  14. ^ a b Dayez-Burgeon, Pascal (2012). Histoire de la Corée: Des origines à nos jours (in French). Paris: Tallandier. p. 187. ISBN 978-2-84734-897-2.
  15. ^ Fischer 2016, p. 241.
  16. ^ a b c d Choe Ik-gyu. North Korea Leadership Watch 2009, p. 2.
  17. ^ Fischer 2016, p. 235.
  18. ^ Fischer 2016, p. 192.
  19. ^ Fischer 2016, p. 202.
  20. ^ Fischer 2016, p. 215.
  21. ^ a b Fischer 2016, p. 273.
  22. ^ Fischer 2016, pp. 244–245.
  23. ^ Fischer 2016, p. 245.
  24. ^ a b Fischer 2016, p. 249.
  25. ^ Fischer 2016, p. 250.
  26. ^ Fischer 2016, p. 264.
  27. ^ Fischer 2016, p. 265.
  28. ^ Fischer 2016, p. 303.
  29. ^ a b c "Choe Ik-gyu Named to Key Post of Workers' Party". North Korea Newsletter (47). Yonhap News Agency. 26 March 2009. Retrieved 18 December 2017.
  30. ^ Moore, Malcolm (3 June 2009). "'Ruthless' youngest son to succeed Kim Jong-il". Irish Independent. Retrieved 19 December 2017.
  31. ^ "Personnel Shuffles in the first half of 2010". North Korea Leadership Watch. 4 June 2010. Retrieved 19 December 2017.
  32. ^ North Korea Handbook 2002, p. 170.
  33. ^ Gause, Ken E. (2011). North Korea under Kim Chong-il: Power, Politics, and Prospects for Change: Power, Politics, and Prospects for Change. Santa Barbara: ABC-CLIO. p. 219. ISBN 978-0-313-38176-8.

Works cited edit

  • Fischer, Paul (2016). A Kim Jong-Il Production: Kidnap, Torture, Murder... Making Movies North Korean-Style. London: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-241-97000-3.
  • North Korea Handbook. Seoul: Yonhap News Agency. 2002. ISBN 978-0-7656-3523-5.
  • Choe Ik-gyu (PDF). North Korea Leadership Watch. October 2009. Retrieved 19 December 2017.

External links edit

choe, this, korean, name, family, name, choe, korean, 최익규, born, february, 1934, also, known, under, pseudonym, choe, sang, north, korean, film, director, propagandist, politician, born, 1934, february, 1934, hwadae, county, north, hamgyong, province, koreanat. In this Korean name the family name is Choe Choe Ik gyu Korean 최익규 1 born 27 February 1934 also known under the pseudonym Choe Sang gun is a North Korean film director propagandist and politician Choe Ik gyuBorn 1934 02 26 26 February 1934 age 90 Hwadae County North Hamgyong Province KoreaNationalityNorth KoreanEducationBaccalaureate Kim Hyong Jik University of Education 1954 Red Flag Mangyongdae Revolutionary SchoolOccupation s Film director politicianYears active1955 presentEmployerKorea Film StudioNotable workSea of Blood 1968 The Flower Girl 1972 OfficeMinister of CultureTerm2003 2006Political partyWorkers Party of KoreaKorean nameChosŏn gŭl최익규Hancha崔益奎Revised RomanizationChoe Ik gyuMcCune ReischauerCh oe Ik kyuPseudonymChosŏn gŭl최상근Revised RomanizationChoe Sang geunMcCune ReischauerCh oe Sang gŭnChoe became the head of the Korea Film Studio in 1956 at age 22 By the time Kim Jong il took over the country s film industry in 1968 Choe was the most experienced filmmaker of North Korea Kim and Choe became close associates Kim producing and Choe directing a number of important North Korean films Sea of Blood 1968 and The Flower Girl 1972 were Immortal Classics that in addition to being popular successes profoundly shaped the industry By the end of the 1960s Choe supervised film making in all of North Korea as the Propaganda and Agitation Department film section head In 1972 his responsibilities covered other forms of North Korean propaganda as well after he was made the vice director of the Department In 1978 Kim had South Korea s famous director actress couple Shin Sang ok and Choi Eun hee abducted to North Korea Choe was tasked with aiding them to make films for North Korea After Shin and Choi escaped in 1986 on a business trip in Vienna under Choe s watch he was demoted Kim Jong il s trust in Choe would survive despite numerous incidents leading to the latter s dismissal from his posts All in all Choe has been sacked five times from the Propaganda and Agitation Department first in 1969 then in 1977 as part of purges in 1986 after the Vienna affair in 1993 and finally 2010 He served as the country s Minister of Culture between 2003 and 2006 He finally became the head of the Propaganda and Agitation Department in 2009 but was replaced the following year He remains a delegate to the Supreme People s Assembly Choe remained part of Kim s inner circle until the latter s death in 2011 Choe supported Kim s youngest son Kim Jong un s ascension to the leadership of the country at a time when he was still an uncertain heir Contents 1 Early and personal life 2 Career 2 1 Abduction of Shin Sang ok and Choi Eun hee 2 2 Return to politics 2 3 Succession of Kim Jong un 3 Filmography 4 Opera 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Works cited 7 External linksEarly and personal life editChoe Ik gyu was born on 26 February 1934 to a poor family in Hwadae County 2 3 North Hamgyong Province Korea 2 Choe graduated with a baccalaureate from the department of Russian literature of Kim Hyong jik Teachers College in 1954 3 2 and briefly became a lecturer of Russian at Kim Il sung University s Pyongyang Labor Academy that same year 3 Choe also studied in the Soviet Union and graduated from the Red Flag Mangyongdae Revolutionary School in Pyongyang at some point 4 5 Choe is married and has a son and three daughters His eldest daughter Choe Il sim is an aspiring scenario writer having written scripts for the five part movie series The Country I Saw 1988 6 7 Career editChoe began working at the Korea Film Studio 4 first as a deputy film director in 1955 and then as an independent director 3 2 He became the head of the studio in 1956 at the age of just 22 4 As a filmmaker he was largely self taught but aspiring 2 In addition to his formal education in arts he now had much experience with the Stalinist model of making films in particular 8 Choe s breakthrough was the 1963 film A Garden Zinnia 2 In 1968 Kim Jong il the country s future leader took control of the country s film industry Kim lacked experience in the field and so he teamed up with Choe 9 who was much experienced by this time and was arguably the single North Korean most knowledgeable about film other than Kim 4 Choe became Kim s closest partner in his activities related to film 9 his film tutor Their collaborations became immensely popular Choe directing and Kim producing films that would become known as Immortal Classics and People s Prize winners 8 10 The first film Choe and Kim made together was Sea of Blood 1968 8 11 followed by Five Guerilla Brothers the same year By the end of the decade Choe had been appointed as a supervisor of the film industry section of the Propaganda and Agitation Department of the ruling Workers Party of Korea 2 nbsp Mass games in Pyongyang a recurring propaganda spectacle developed by ChoeIn 1972 Choe and Kim released The Flower Girl 8 The film augmented Choe s position as Kim s close confidant making him responsible for propaganda spectacles beyond film 12 Choe was promoted as the vice director of the Propaganda and Agitation Department and elected a member of parliament in the fifth Supreme People s Assembly 2 Choe was now in charge of events like Day of the Sun celebrations and Liberation Day marches He developed mass games that would evolve into the Arirang Festival 12 the organizing of which he is still overseeing 13 Choe would also give artistic guidance to Korean revolutionary operas and plays 2 For instance he had directed an operatic adaption of Sea of Blood in 1971 14 Choe and Kim s relationship became a close and long one Choe would be personally involved in the making of many more films and supervising the production of others such as multi part The Star of Korea 1980 1987 2 Abduction of Shin Sang ok and Choi Eun hee edit Further information Abduction of Shin Sang ok and Choi Eun hee Deputy Director Choe is the right person to help bring about change in our film industry He is well versed in motion pictures He is the best man for this work But as you can see Deputy Director Choe can t do it all by himself Kim Jong il explaining to Shin Sang ok why he had been abducted on a secret tape recorded by Shin 15 Choe Ik gyu played a role in the abduction of Shin Sang ok and Choi Eun hee a famous South Korean director actress couple 16 In a secret tape recorded by Shin and Choi Kim Jong il is heard confiding to the couple that he decided to kidnap them on the advice of Choe who considered Shin the best director of South Korea 17 After years of separation 18 when Shin and Choi were re united by their captor Kim Jong il on 6 March 1983 19 Choe was present He would work with Shin from that point on to direct movies for Kim Jong il 20 He would pass on messages between Kim Shin and Choi the latter two rarely met Kim in person 21 First Choe accompanied Shin and Choi on a trip from Pyongyang to Moscow East Germany Hungary Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia 22 The purpose of the trip was to scout for locations for the first film Shin had agreed to make for Kim Jong il An Emissary of No Return 23 Choe was discontent with the project He had been an acclaimed film director in his own right but now he had to mind his South Korean counterpart 24 Both Shin and Choi disliked Choe 21 Choe resorted to criticizing Shin s directing in front of the crew 24 Shin gained back control of the project by threatening to report to Kim Jong il about Choe s behavior 25 The film was finished and would be played at the London Film Festival and Shin was to attend 26 Shin contemplated escaping there but Choe and an entourage of bodyguards had traveled to London in advance 27 After Shin and Choi had managed to escape in Vienna Choe was demoted from his position in the Propaganda and Agitation Department He was sent into the countryside his exact whereabouts unknown for years 28 Return to politics edit nbsp Korean revolutionary opera an art Choe has been involved in as a director and cultural administratorChoe Ik gyu was allowed to return as the vice director of the Propaganda and Agitation Department in 1988 13 He assumed full control of the theater and operatic fields That year he was involved in making The Life of Chunhyang an acclaimed folk opera Choe guided performers as if he were a stage director Beginning with the early 1990s Choe credited under his pseudonym Choe Sang geun produced The Nation and Destiny Choe produced directed and wrote scenarios throughout the production of the 50 part film series which Kim Jong il considered the last work made under his personal guidance Choe briefly fell out of public life in 1993 when he was dismissed from his Propaganda and Agitation Department post again Even during this period Kim Jong il allowed him to travel to Germany to treat his health problems which reflects the amount of trust Kim had in Choe 6 All in all Choe has been dismissed four times from the Propaganda and Agitation Department 3 Choe became the Minister of Culture in September 2003 but retired temporarily some two years later because of diabetes and other chronic health issues 29 He relinquished the position in 2006 16 Choe was elected to the 12th Supreme People s Assembly on 8 March 2009 29 representing Electoral District 73 16 He finally became the head of the Propaganda and Agitation Department in 2009 As the director of the Department 16 Choe was one of North Korea s propaganda chiefs 30 He was replaced by Kang Nung su in early February 2010 for unknown reasons 31 Choe was often seen accompanying Kim Jong il on formal occasions until the latter s death in 2011 8 When traveling outside North Korea Choe uses the name Choe Sang geun 2 Such was the case for instance when he visited Seoul in South Korea in 2000 in the capacity of the counsel to the National Orchestra of North Korea 32 Succession of Kim Jong un edit Choe was among those who vouched for the succession of Kim Jong un at a time when his ascension to power remained uncertain 33 In addition to Kim Jong il Choe would aide Kim s third wife Ko Yong hui and Jang Song thaek 29 Paul Fischer the author of A Kim Jong Il Production assesses that t he modern North Korean state which is a production a display performance of its own owes as much to Choe Ik Gyu s taste and talents as it does to Kim Jong Il 12 Filmography editA Garden Zinnia 백일홍 1963 2 Sea of Blood 1968 11 Five Guerilla Brothers 1968 2 The Flower Girl 1972 8 Opera editSea of Blood 1971 14 The Life of Chunhyang 1988 6 See also edit nbsp North Korea portal nbsp Film portalCabinet of North Korea Culture of North Korea Central Committee of the Workers Party of Korea Politics of North Korea Cinema of North Korea Propaganda in North Korea List of North Korean filmsReferences edit Vantage Point Vol 5 Seoul Naewoe Press 1982 p 24 OCLC 29800060 a b c d e f g h i j k l m North Korea Handbook 2002 p 185 a b c d e Choe Ik gyu North Korea Leadership Watch 2009 p 1 a b c d Fischer 2016 p 51 Jeong Yong soo 2 June 2009 Sources Kim chooses third son as heir Korea JoongAng Daily Retrieved 18 December 2017 a b c North Korea Handbook 2002 p 186 Lewis Jeffery 30 August 2012 The Country I Saw or How We Learned to Stop Worrying and Love North Korea s Bomb Almost 38 North The US Korea Institute at Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies Retrieved 19 December 2017 a b c d e f Fischer 2016 p 61 a b Fischer 2016 p 60 Schonherr Johannes 2012 North Korean Cinema A History Jefferson McFarland p 47 ISBN 978 0 7864 6526 2 a b Yoon Keumsil Kim Williams Bruce 2015 Two Lenses on the Korean Ethos Key Cultural Concepts and Their Appearance in Cinema Jefferson McFarland p 105 ISBN 978 0 7864 9682 2 a b c Fischer 2016 p 62 a b Fischer 2016 p 310 a b Dayez Burgeon Pascal 2012 Histoire de la Coree Des origines a nos jours in French Paris Tallandier p 187 ISBN 978 2 84734 897 2 Fischer 2016 p 241 a b c d Choe Ik gyu North Korea Leadership Watch 2009 p 2 Fischer 2016 p 235 Fischer 2016 p 192 Fischer 2016 p 202 Fischer 2016 p 215 a b Fischer 2016 p 273 Fischer 2016 pp 244 245 Fischer 2016 p 245 a b Fischer 2016 p 249 Fischer 2016 p 250 Fischer 2016 p 264 Fischer 2016 p 265 Fischer 2016 p 303 a b c Choe Ik gyu Named to Key Post of Workers Party North Korea Newsletter 47 Yonhap News Agency 26 March 2009 Retrieved 18 December 2017 Moore Malcolm 3 June 2009 Ruthless youngest son to succeed Kim Jong il Irish Independent Retrieved 19 December 2017 Personnel Shuffles in the first half of 2010 North Korea Leadership Watch 4 June 2010 Retrieved 19 December 2017 North Korea Handbook 2002 p 170 Gause Ken E 2011 North Korea under Kim Chong il Power Politics and Prospects for Change Power Politics and Prospects for Change Santa Barbara ABC CLIO p 219 ISBN 978 0 313 38176 8 Works cited edit Fischer Paul 2016 A Kim Jong Il Production Kidnap Torture Murder Making Movies North Korean Style London Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 241 97000 3 North Korea Handbook Seoul Yonhap News Agency 2002 ISBN 978 0 7656 3523 5 Choe Ik gyu PDF North Korea Leadership Watch October 2009 Retrieved 19 December 2017 External links editProfile at the Ministry of Unification in Korean Choe Ik gyu at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Choe Ik gyu amp oldid 1215407281, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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