Following the execution of Jang Song-thaek, the Uncle to North Korean Leader Kim Jong-un, Governments have expressed alarm after the
execution of such once a powerful figure.
The reported execution of North
Korean leader Kim Jong-un's powerful uncle has caused worries over the
stability of the isolated country, with various governments expressing concern
over the potential implications of the move.
The state-run KCNA news agency
announced on Friday that a special military trial was held for the
once-influential Jang Song-thaek before he was executed on Thursday.
Jang, who had been branded as
"traitor" and dismissed from his positions and
powers on Monday, was accused of a string of criminal acts including
corruption, womanising and drug-taking.
"The North usually curbs
internal instability by waging provocations externally," the Ryoo
Kihl-Jae, the South Korean unification minister said, warning the purge
could be followed by military actions, including another nuclear test.
China, Pyongyang's major ally and
economic lifeline, said Jang's execution was an "internal matter" but
also stressed the need for stability.
"As a neighbour we hope to see
national stability, economic development and people living in happiness in the
Democratic People's Republic of Korea," foreign ministry spokesman Hong
Lei said at a regular briefing.
Tokyo said that it was "closely
watching the situation".
"We will calmly monitor the
situation while communicating with other countries and collect relevant
information," the Kyodo news agency quoted Chief Cabinet Secretary
Yoshihide Suga as saying.
Washington said that the execution
was "another example of the extreme brutality of the North Korean
regime".
The North usually curbs internal
instability by waging provocations externally
Ryoo Kihl-Jae, South Korea's
unification minister
"We are following developments
in North Korea closely and consulting with our allies and partners in the
region," Patrick Ventrell, a spokesman for the White House's National
Security Council, said.
London expressed "deep concern
about the impact of this unpredictable regime on stability in the region".
"Our embassy in Pyongyang is
monitoring the situation closely and we will continue to maintain close contact
with our allies on this," a Foreign and Commonwealth Office
spokesman said.
Al Jazeera's Harry Fawcett,
reporting from Bangkok, said the execution has laid bare a massive power
struggle in the secretive country.
"It's an incredibly public
condemnation of this once very powerful man," our correspondent said.
KCNA said earlier this week that
Jang had been removed from all his posts and expelled from the Workers' Party.
"From long ago, Jang had a
dirty political ambition. He dared not raise his head when Kim Il-sung and Kim
Jong-il were alive," KCNA said, referring to leader Kim's grandfather and
father, who were previous rulers of the dynastic state.
"He began revealing his true
colours, thinking that it was just the time for him to realise his wild
ambition in the period of historic turn when the generation of the revolution
was replaced."
Jang was married to Kim's aunt, the
daughter of the North's founding leader Kim Il-sung, and was widely considered
to be working to ensure his nephew firmly established his grip on power in the
past two years.
Jang had been a prominent fixture in
many of the reports and photographs of Kim Jong-un's public activities, but his
appearances have tapered off sharply this year and he has not appeared in
official media since early November.
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