Kim Jong Un erases two officials from months-old state photos, prompting fears they were executed over botched warship launch: report

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North Korea’s despotic ruler Kim Jong Un appeared to have a top navy commander and another senior official erased from months-old official state photos following the nation’s high-profile failed ship launch — fueling speculation that they were executed, according to a report.

Admr. Kim Myong Sil and Hong Kil Ho, who operate Chongjin Shipyard, were expunged from the North Korean photographic record on orders of Kim — who blames them for the hermit kingdom’s inability to launch a naval destroyer last month, NK News reported.

The original image released by North Korean state media that showed Admr. Myong Sil and Hong Kil Ho standing an arm’s distance from hermit kingdom leader Kim Jong Un. KCTV

The two North Korean honchos were originally pictured on the left side of the photo released by North Korean state media, near Kim.

In the edited photos released by North Korean state media, there is now a conspicuously empty space where Myong Sil and Kil Ho once stood.

The move was reminiscent of the Soviet Union’s brutal dictator Joseph Stalin, who made common practice of erasing political adversaries from notable pics, including the infamously overt erasure of Nikolai Yezhov.

In freshly edited photos released by North Korean state media, Myong Sil and Kil Ho are absent. KCTV

Kil Ho was blamed by the portly dictator and state media for the catastrophic failure to launch a 5,000-ton naval destroyer into the Sea of Japan on May 21.

The warship became unbalanced as it was lowered into the water at the port of Chongjin, causing it to slide into the water — crushing and wrecking parts of the hull and leaving the bow stuck on the shipway, Korean Central News Agency reported at the time.

Several officials were arrested at the shipyard directly after the shameful display, with experts believing Ho was one of at least four who faced repercussions, The Sun reported, citing experts.

The 5,000-ton naval destroyer slid into the water and caused major hull damage on May 21, but was successfully relaunched on Saturday. DigitalGlobe/Getty Images

Admr. Sil has been a top navy commander in the isolated nation since Kim took power in 2011 —- but that is not likely to have saved him from the tyrant’s bloodlust.

“If Kim Myong Sik fell on his sword, he may have avoided a public execution and saved his family and close associates from imprisonment,” Michael Madden, founder of NK Leadership Watch, told The Sun.

“On the other hand, if KJU is in a message-sending mood, then they may gather other top officials in the military and defense industry to watch,” Madden added.

North Korea successfully launched the massive destroyer on Saturday in what state media described as “convincing proof of the rapid transformation of [the North Korean] Navy.”

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