Kim Jong Un Executed One Of His Officials For The Most Insanely Pathetic Reason

The leader of the North Korean murderous despotic regime continues to push the limits on how bat shit crazy one person can possibly be. First, Kim Jong Un shoots his defense chief with a gun used to take down airplanes, then he claims to have discovered a super-strength dick pill that he had the audacity to shop around to the West (I’m still intrigued), THEN says he has a cure for Ebola and AIDS.

His next ludicrous act: executing his chief airport architect because he hated the proposed design for the nation’s new airport.

Kim and his posse have spent the last few days showing off the new airport in Pyongyang, which is equipped with a jewelry store, coffee bar, a pharmacy and a chocolate fountain. A Central Korean News Agency released a 30-photo slideshow of Kim Jong Un and his wife touring one of the airport terminals with smiling faces.

Those pictures did not include Ma Won Chun, North Korea’s director of the Designing Department of the National Defence Commission. That’s because Chun and five other high-level officials were killed by North Korea’s merciless leader due to a simple difference in opinion.

According to a diplomat, Ma was executed “for corrupt practices and failure to follow orders.”

In the transcript of the state media report obtained by NKNews, Kim said:

“Defects were manifested in the last phase of the construction of the Terminal 2 because the designers failed to bear in mind the party’s idea of architectural beauty that is the life and soul and core in architecture to preserve the character and national identity.

It is necessary to finish the construction of the terminal to be an icon of (North) Korea, the face of the country and the gateway to Pyongyang.”

The airport is scheduled to open this week and I’m guessing flights are really, really cheap.

[H/T Unilad]

Matt Keohan Avatar
Matt’s love of writing was born during a sixth grade assembly when it was announced that his essay titled “Why Drugs Are Bad” had taken first prize in D.A.R.E.’s grade-wide contest. The anti-drug people gave him a $50 savings bond for his brave contribution to crime-fighting, and upon the bond’s maturity 10 years later, he used it to buy his very first bag of marijuana.