Pak Song-chol
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Biography
[edit | edit source]Pak Song-Chol was born in Keishū, Keishōhoku-dō (today North Gyeongsang Province) during the Japanese colonial period. He attended and dropped out of Sophia University in Japan. While studying abroad, he joined the Japanese Communist Party. Pak participated in Anti-Japan Partisan in Manchukuo in April 1934. In 1936, he was a youth member of the 1st corps of the 5th Army of the Tohoku Anti-Japanese Union. During this period, he was described as an extremely loyal and courageous youth member. In 1937, the second army 4th teacher 1st group. 1942, 1st platoon, 1st battalion, 1st battalion, 88th independent sniper brigade where he met Kim Il Sung. He's the father of Pak Chun Bo, who had learned together with Kim Il Sung's son Kim Jong Il.
In the spring of 1942, as a Soviet military reconnaissance officer, he was given the task of following the deployment situation of Japanese troops at the border.[3] It should be a mission that ends in a week, but he did not return until autumn, during which he sent important information over radio signals.
North Korea
[edit | edit source]In 1948 he was the Chief of Staff of the 3rd Division of the Korean People's Army (Colonel) . In 1950, he became the 15th division Commander and participated in the Korean War. In September 1953 he was appointed Director of the Ministry of National Guard and Scouting. After that, he moved to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, and from August 1954, he served as an envoy to the People's Republic of Bulgaria, and in May 1955 the ambassador. August 1956, International Director of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea, Deputy Foreign Minister since October of the same year, and Foreign Minister in October 1959, until he retired in July 1970. During this time, in 1966 he also served as the Vice Premier in the Cabinet of North Korea.
In 1972, as vice premier, he secretly visited Seoul in the lead-up to the Joint Statement on reunification.[4]
He was appointed Vice President by the Supreme People's Assembly in December 1977 and he left the office in October 1997.[5][6] His last public appearance was in September 2003 in the viewing box at the 55th-anniversary commemoration inspection ceremonies in North Korea. He was one of the oldest former heads of government in the world.
Death and funeral
[edit | edit source]Pak died on 28 October 2008. A funeral committee was appointed with Kim Yong-nam as the chairman.[7][8]
Works
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See also
[edit | edit source]References
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- ^ “6ㆍ25때 북한군 작전국장/유성철 “나의 증언”:3” (朝鮮語). 韓国日報. (1990年11月3日
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External links
[edit | edit source]- Obituary in the Korea Times
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- 1913 births
- 2008 deaths
- Vice presidents of North Korea
- Vice premiers of North Korea
- Korean resistance members
- Korean communists
- North Korean atheists
- Prime ministers of North Korea
- Foreign ministers of North Korea
- Heroes of the Republic (North Korea)
- Members of the 6th Politburo of the Workers' Party of Korea
- Members of the 6th Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea
- People of 88th Separate Rifle Brigade
- Korean revolutionaries