Background
He was born in 1930 in Taedong County, South Pyongan province, in of Korea under Japanese rule.
head manager politician deputy chief
He was born in 1930 in Taedong County, South Pyongan province, in of Korea under Japanese rule.
He graduated from Kim Il-sung University in 1960 and subsequently from the Kim Il-sung Higher Party School.
He served as a researcher for the Physical Education Science Research Center starting in 1961, and as the vice-manager of the Mankyongdae Art Company public relations division and section chief of the WPK Cultural Department. In May 1975, he was appointed office manager of the Society Foreign Cultural Relations With Foreign Countries, and in 1986 he became deputy chief of the WPK Organizational Bureau. He was appointed advisor to the Pochonbo Electronic Ensemble in September 1991, and as head of the WPK United Front Department in January 1993.
In February 1997, he was made head of the WPK external relations department (previously the Social and Cultural Department), and he is currently serving as head of Department 225.
In April 1990, he was elected to the 9th session of the Supreme People's Assembly, and subsequently also served in the 10th (1998) and 11th (2003) assemblies.
He is the vice-chair of the Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of the Fatherland. After being appointed to the WPK central committee and to the position deputy chief for relations with Chochongryon in the WPK United Front Department in March 1988, in March 1989 Kang became first deputy chief of the WPK United Front Department, and in August 1990 he became a deputy member of the Committee for the Peaceful Reunification of the Fatherland.
He is head of department 225 of the Cabinet of North of Korea, and an alternative member of the politburo of the Central Committee of the Workers" Party of of Korea. In September 2010, he was appointed an alternate member of the Central Committee of the Workers’ Party of of Korea. Kang was a member of the national mourning committees for the deaths of Kim Il-sung in 1994, O Chinese-u in 1995, Park Song-chol in 2008, Kim Jung-rin in 2010, and Kim Jong Il in 2011.