North Korea’s ruler Kim Jong-un handing more power to sister because he is ‘stressed’, claims spy agency
NORTH Korea's ruler Kim Jong-un has handed another set of new powers to his sister because he is stressed, a spy agency has claimed.
Kim's sister Kim Yo-jong has been rising through the ranks of the North Korean elite and is now seen by many as her brother's closest ally.
Spooks denied it was linked to ongoing rumours of the tyrant's poor health, and said it does not mean Kim has picked her as his successor to rule.
Mr Ha added: "Kim Jong-un still exerts absolute power, but in comparison to the past, some of the authority has been transferred little by little."
He blamed "high stress levels" for the power shift, and also said it is so Kim can distance himself from any of the regime's failures.
Kim's sister is not the only one to receive new powers either - as the dictator handed out new jobs to other senior regime figures.
Martin Weiser, an independent analyst who studies North Korean media, said before the announcement that her absence pointed to a "major coming shift".
Cheong Seong-Chang, director of the Center for North Korean Studies at the Sejong Institute, added: "Compared to others, she enjoys relative freedom from technicalities.
"She could have stayed out of the scene, but still could have been involved in the preparation and the meeting’s procedure somehow."
Kim Yo-jong's last appearance alongside the secretive kingdom's ruling elite was at a conference in Pyongyang on July 27.
She was also seen picking up a cigarette butt dropped by Kim during an inspection visit to a chicken factory last month.
Sources claimed last month Kim's sister was behind the blowing up of the highly symbolic liaison office in the border town of Kaesong.
Who is Kim Yo-jong?
NORTH Korean tyrant Kim Jong-un's younger sister Kim Yo-jong is now seen as the “alter ego” of the tyrant.
She was was born in September 1987, the daughter of North Korean dictator Kim Jong-il, and is to have been close to Kim even as a child.
Both studied together in Switzerland between 1996 and 2000 with each depending on the other for company and support during those isolated years.
It is believed she went on to further her education at the Kim Il-sung Military University and then computer science at the Kim Il-sung university.
She was very rarely seen in public until 2010, when she was photographed at a party conference, but became prominent in the lead up to her father's death in 2011.
Taking on various jobs within the party, she stepped onto the world stage in 2018 when she represented North Korea and her brother at the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea.
She is now thought to be the mastermind behind Kim’s public image, both at home and abroad - and is understood to be his closest ally in the regime.