Ex-diplomats allege North Korean UNESCO official has intelligence ties
June 19 (Asia Today) -- Former North Korean diplomats have alleged that a North Korean education specialist affiliated with UNESCO and being considered as a speaker at an international forum in South Korea may be connected to Pyongyang's intelligence apparatus.
Jang Kwang-chol is under consideration to participate by video in a session titled "UNESCO and the Future of Education: Challenges and Prospects" at the 21st Jeju Forum for Peace and Prosperity, according to forum organizers.
The forum, jointly hosted by South Korea's Foreign Ministry, the Jeju provincial government and other organizations, is scheduled to take place from Wednesday through June 26 at Haevichi Hotel & Resort Jeju and Jeju Stone Park.
The former diplomats' allegations regarding Jang could not be independently verified. Neither UNESCO nor the North Korean government was quoted as responding to the claims.
Several former North Korean diplomats said Pyongyang selects Foreign Ministry officials for assignments at United Nations agencies to secure international assistance, collect information about foreign governments and South Korea and earn foreign currency.
They alleged that officials selected for such work sometimes receive fabricated or altered professional backgrounds tailored to the agency where they will serve.
Before deployment, the officials may formally transfer their affiliation to an intelligence organization such as North Korea's Reconnaissance General Bureau, the former diplomats claimed. Such an arrangement, they said, allows the officials to operate with greater independence than ordinary North Korean diplomats.
UNESCO materials identify Jang as an education specialist who earned a doctorate in education from Kim Hyong Jik University of Education and previously worked for North Korea's Education Ministry.
The former diplomats alleged that at least part of that professional background could serve as a cover for intelligence-gathering duties.
Ko Young-hwan, a former first secretary at the North Korean Embassy in the Republic of Congo, told Asia Today that North Korea has frequently dispatched what it calls international civil servants to U.N. organizations.
"When they were sent abroad in the past, their affiliations were transferred to organizations under the Workers' Party, such as the United Front Department or the External Information Investigation Department, also known as Office 35," Ko said.
"After those organizations were consolidated, I understand that their affiliations were transferred to the Reconnaissance General Bureau."
Ko, who later headed South Korea's National Institute for Unification Education, said he believed Jang could fall into that category.
North Korea created the Reconnaissance General Bureau in 2009 by combining intelligence and operational units that had previously been divided among the Workers' Party and the military.
South Korean authorities have described the bureau as North Korea's principal organization for overseas intelligence collection, cyber operations and clandestine activities.
Former North Korean diplomats also said officials assigned to international organizations operate with fewer restrictions than diplomats posted to embassies.
Ko recalled an official who worked at UNESCO headquarters in Paris while he was serving in the North Korean Foreign Ministry.
"He attended a weekly self-criticism session at the embassy only once a week and did not have to report unless something unusual occurred," Ko said.
Ryu Hyun-woo, a former acting North Korean ambassador to Kuwait, said such officials can operate independently under special circumstances.
"They are diplomats who act alone in exceptional situations," Ryu said. "I understand that they receive separate, specialized training before being dispatched."
The Jeju Forum's organizers said education innovation is one of this year's major themes and that Jang is being considered because he is a UNESCO-affiliated official suited to the education session.
The organizers have not publicly suggested that his proposed participation is connected to intelligence activity.
Some observers, however, have interpreted the invitation as a possible attempt to reopen communication with North Korea amid strained inter-Korean relations.
The outreach comes after the Jeju provincial government provided North Korea with about 160 million won ($116,000) worth of agricultural and medical supplies, including hallabong citrus seedlings, chemicals used to combat pine wilt disease and kidney dialysis equipment.
The provincial government's North Korea assistance program has also drawn scrutiny following reports that Jeju Gov. Oh Young-hun had contact with Ri Ho-nam, a former counselor at the North Korean Embassy in Beijing who has been identified by South Korean sources as an operative involved in inter-Korean affairs.
No evidence was presented in the article showing that Jang had engaged in espionage or other illegal activity in connection with the Jeju Forum.
-- Reported by Asia Today; translated by UPI
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This story was originally published June 19, 2026 at 9:29 PM.