‘North Korean Goebbels’, official whose propaganda helped build Kim dynasty, dies at 94
Propaganda chief helped build personality cults around country’s three dynastic leaders
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Kim Ki-nam, a North Korean propaganda chief who helped build personality cults around the country’s three dynastic leaders, has died at 94, the North’s state media said.
North Korea’s official Korean Central News Agency said the country’s current leader, Kim Jong-un, visited the body of Ki-nam at a funeral hall in the capital, Pyongyang, early Wednesday and expressed condolences to family members. The agency said Mr Kim will lead the state funeral committee for Ki-nam, who will be buried on Thursday.
KCNA said Ki-nam, a former secretary of the ruling Workers’ Party’s central committee, "devoted his all to the sacred struggle for defending and strengthening the ideological purity of our revolution and firmly guaranteeing the steady victory of the socialist cause”.
The agency said he died Tuesday after being treated for age-related illnesses and multiple organ dysfunctions for the past year.
Ki-nam’s role as the country’s chief propagandist earned him notoriety in South Korea, where media nicknamed him the “North Korean Goebbels”, after Nazi Germany’s propaganda minister Joseph Goebbels.
He also led the delegation to South Korea in 2009 that attended the funeral of former South Korean president Kim Dae-jung, who had pursued engagement with the North and held a summit with former North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, the father of the current ruler.
Ki-nam was one of the seven senior officials who joined Mr Kim in accompanying the hearse of the late leader Kim Jong-il following his death in 2011.
Ki-nam was a professor at Kim Il Sung University and the chief editorial writer of the state-run Rodong Sinmun newspaper before taking leadership roles in the ruling Worker’s Party’s propaganda departments starting in the 1980s.