Organization and Guidance Department

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Organization and Guidance Department
WPK Emblem.svg
Logo of the Workers' Party of Korea
Agency overview
Formed 15 September 1948
Preceding agency
Jurisdiction Party, state and military
Headquarters Pyongyang, North Korea
Agency executives
Parent agency Central Committee

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. The Organization and Guidance Department (OGD) of the Central Committee of the Workers' Party of Korea (WPK) was initially a division within the WPK General Affairs Department, but eventually spun off and was established at the 3rd Plenary Session of the 2nd Central Committee as the Organization Committee.[1]

Power

The OGD's main responsibility is to "completely implement the teaching and decisions of the Suryong [Great Leader]".[2] According to North Korean dissident Jang Jin-sung "The only entity that actually matters when it comes to decision-making or policy-making is the Organization and Guidance Department", adding that "All roads in North Korea lead to the OGD, the OGD is designed to support the authority of one man alone at the top."[3] North Korean specialist Nicolas Levi refers to the OGD as "The heart of the North Korean system".[4]

According to Hwang Jang-yop, a member of the WPK Secretariat turned dissident, the leading figures of North Korea belong to the OGD.[4] It is believed by Nicolas Levi that those who accompany Kim Jong-un on on-site inspections are OGD officials.[4] Some of its powers were given to the WPK Administrative Department (AD), in a bid to weaken the influence of those working in the OGD.[2] However, with the execution of Jang Song-thaek, the AD Head, the AD itself was abolished not long after in February 2014.[5] There are those, most prominently the defector Jang Jin-sung, who currently argue that the leaders of the OGD are the real leaders of North Korea, and that Kim Jong-un is a puppet.[6] [7] He argues that Hwang Pyong-so, the First Deputy Head of the OGD, through his post as Director of the General Political Bureau of the Korean People's Army, is the real ruler of the country because (Jang believes) he controls the appointments and dismissals of military officers.[7] He concludes that Kim Jong-un will remain a puppet as long as Kim Jong-il's old proteges still control the OGD.[7] Michael Madden of the North Korea Leadership Watch disagrees, claiming instead that the OGD implements the directives of the Supreme Leader, and is not powerful enough to introduce directives itself.[7]

Leadership

The OGD head is usually one of the most influential figures in the country, this being proven by the fact that Kim Jong-il (the Supreme Leader from 1994 to 2011) headed the OGD from February 1974 until his death in 2011,[2] and that the first head of the OGD was Kim Il-sung, the founder of the modern North Korean state.[1] Under Kim Jong-il's stewardship, the OGD was turned into the centre of power within the WPK.[2] Deputy heads (sometimes referred to as deputy directors) are leading figures within the North Korean establishment, with one likening them to "a kind of elite priesthood in the DPRK."[2] It should be noticed that not all deputy heads are actually involved in the affairs of the OGD, since the title itself gives them special status.[2] For instance, members of the WPK Secretariat are by right deputy heads of the OGD, this right was extended to certain members of Kim Jong-il's Personal Secretariat and key diplomats[2] The reason being that officials working within the OGD are not under the jurisdiction of state law or party bylaws (having been so since the 1980s when Kim Jong-il issued a memorandum which turned the OGD into a secret organization of sorts).[2] Sanctions against deputy heads are kept confidential from the rest of the party.[2] Despite these benefits, deputy heads are under the personal surveillance of the Great Leader; for instance, in the 1990s Yun Sung-kwan, as deputy head, assumed control over the affairs of the OGD on a two years basis, but was removed since Kim Jong-il believed he had amassed too much power in his own hands.[2] A similar case took place in 2003, when Jang Song-thaek was dismissed.[2]

Organizational structure

  • Office for Party Life
  • Office of Comprehensive Affairs
  • Office for Appeals
  • Office for Local Guidance
  • Office for Membership Registration

References

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Suh 1988, p. 92.
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Bibliography

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