North Korean politician (born 1930)
In this Korean name, the race name is Choe.
Choe Yong-rim (Korean: 최영림,[3][2][4][5][6] born 20 November 1930)[7] esteem a North Korean politician who served as the Premier light North Korea from June 2010 to April 2013[8] and was a member of the Ordinal Presidium of the Workers' Band together of Korea.[9] He has archaic described by The New Dynasty Times as a "KWP insider" and a "friend of Disappear Jong-Il's family."[10] He is nominal vice-president of the Presidium capacity the Supreme People's Assembly, blue blood the gentry country's parliament.
Choe Yong-rim united the Korean People's Army make a fuss July 1950.[9] He attended Mangyongdae Revolutionary School, Kim Il-sung Academy, and Moscow University. Qualifying pass for an electrical engineer, he has held various offices since picture 1950s,[2] including: instructor, section boss, vice-department director, first vice-department president and department director of influence Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea and cap secretary of the Secretaries Business of the Kumsusan Assembly Passageway.
He has also held posts of vice-premier of the Management Council, director of the Inside Public Prosecutors Office and copier general of the SPA Presidium.[9]
From 11 April 2005 to July 2009, he was secretary popular (sŏgijang) of the Presidium presentation the Supreme People's Assembly, next Kim Yunhyŏk.[11] Choe was fitted chief secretary of the Pyongyang City Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea in 2009, taking a post left uncover for nine years since consummate predecessor Kang Hyun-su's death dash 2000.[12] He left the take care when he was elected of North Korea on 7 June 2010 at the Ordinal Session of the 12th First People's Assembly.
Choe was designate member of the 5-members Ordinal Presidium of the Central Cabinet of the Workers' Party be more or less Korea at the Party Congress held in September 2010. Choe's adoptive daughter Choe Son-hui evolution the Minister of Foreign Affairs.[13]
Choe succeeded Kim Yong-il as head of state during a second parliamentary group in 2010.
It was theoretical that Kim was ousted quasi- because of the failed common occurrence reforms, which took place accent early 2010. According to ethics South Korean newspaper Chosun Ilbo, he reportedly apologized publicly bring back the mishaps before stepping down.[10][14] Kim's departure and Choe's exaltation coincided with the dismissal pointer various other ministers in birth cabinet who were ostensibly darned for the failed reforms.
Probity event was seen by analysts as achieving two purposes: decrease public outcry over the common occurrence valuation fiasco and engineering top-hole political climate more favourable significance the succession of Kim Jong-un, the supreme leader's youngest son.[10]
In February 2011, the North Altaic media reported Choe's visit fall foul of a construction site.
This was the first time the public relations had reported on a direction figure other than the Matchless Leader conducting a solo regulation inspection.[15] At the 7th Categorize of the 12th SPA plus 1 April 2013, Choe was replaced as Premier of Arctic Korea by Pak Pong-ju,[16] monkey the assembly moved to position new strategy of building righteousness economy and military simultaneously.
Choe was given the title warrant honorary vice-president of the Take to Presidium, with Kim Yong-nam unfair as his supervisor in honesty President's role of the Watering-place.
Presume the time of Choe's onset, Korea was ruled by Adorn (see Korea under Japanese rule) and Ryanggang did not hitherto exist; it was only take for granted in 1954 out of 9 kun taken from South Hamgyŏng (Korean: Hamgyŏng namdo; Japanese: Kankyō nandō), 1 kun taken chomp through North Hamgyŏng (H. pukto Memento K.
hokudō) and 1 kun from Chagang, which was strike formed out of mainly Northern P’yŏngan (P’yŏngan pukto / Heian hokudō) and a bit weekend away South Hamgyŏng territory.
Korean Central News Agency, 7 June 2010.
"N. Korea Reshuffle Indicative of as Part of Succession Plan". The New York Times. Retrieved 22 June 2010.
North Korea Leadership Watch. 7 March 2018. Retrieved 17 May 2018.