North Korea’s former ceremonial head of state and one of its longest-serving diplomats, Kim Yong Nam, has died at the age of 97, state media reported on Tuesday.
According to the Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), Kim passed away on Monday, marking the end of a storied career that spanned seven decades and three generations of the Kim dynasty. North Korean leader Kim Jong Un reportedly visited his bier early Tuesday to pay respects, underscoring Kim Yong Nam’s enduring stature in the country’s political hierarchy.
Although Kim Yong Nam never wielded ultimate power in the tightly controlled, family-run state, he was for years its public face abroad. As President of the Presidium of the Supreme People’s Assembly from 1998 until his retirement in 2019, Kim served as North Korea’s nominal head of state — greeting foreign dignitaries, signing agreements, and representing Pyongyang at international forums.
“Despite having a largely ceremonial role in the latter part of his career, Kim Yong Nam had a high degree of influence through patronage connections to North Korea’s diplomats and foreign service personnel,” noted Michael Madden, a North Korea leadership expert at the U.S.-based Stimson Center.
Born in 1928, Kim’s political life was deeply intertwined with the rise of the North Korean state. A graduate of Kim Il Sung University, he held key positions in the Foreign Ministry, where he helped shape Pyongyang’s diplomacy during the Cold War. Under Kim Il Sung, he advanced through the ranks, eventually becoming one of the few trusted figures who could represent the regime on the world stage.
In the 2000s, he became the face of North Korea’s engagement with the outside world, leading delegations abroad and meeting with figures such as Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro in Caracas. His most notable appearance came in 2018, when he led the North Korean delegation to the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, South Korea — a rare moment of diplomacy that helped ease tensions on the Korean Peninsula.
Unusually for a North Korean official of his rank and longevity, Kim Yong Nam was never purged or sidelined under any of the Kim rulers — a rare testament to his political adaptability and loyalty.
KCNA announced that North Korea will hold a state funeral in his honor, a gesture reserved for figures of exceptional service to the regime.
With Kim Yong Nam’s passing, North Korea loses not only its most experienced diplomat but also one of the last living links to its founding generation — a man who quietly navigated the opaque corridors of Pyongyang’s power for nearly a century, always loyal, and never out of favor.








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