{UAH} Maniac North Korea leader Kim Jong-Un uses anti-aircraft gun to execute senior official who fell asleep in meeting
Kim Jong-Un used the bizarre show of force on his own men
Anti-aircraft guns are normally used on fighter planes
Kim Jong Un during a test-fire of strategic submarine-launched ballistic missile
Ri Yong-Jin, who worked at the education department, 'dozed off during a meeting presided over by Kim' - who also used the bizarre method to kill agricultural minister Hwang Min
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un used an anti-aircraft gun to publicly execute a senior official who fell asleep during a meeting.
The maniac leader also used the gun to kill the country's agricultural minister Hwang Min - for challenging his power.
Anti-aircraft guns - as their name suggests - are normally surface-to-air missiles used to handle hostile action from fighter planes in the air.
Using them to kill an individual person would be the military equivalent of using a sledgehammer to crack a nut - for want of a better analogy.
Ri Yong-Jin, who worked at the education department, "dozed off during a meeting presided over by Kim", according to a report.
South Korean newspaper JoongAng Ilbo cited a source with inside knowledge of North Korea.
They revealed: "(Ri Yong-Jin) was arrested on site and intensively questioned by the state security ministry.
"He was executed after other charges, such as corruption, were found during the probe."
The source said: "I understand (Hwang Min) was executed because policy proposals he had pushed for were seen as a direct challenge to the Kim Jong-Un leadership."
Both deaths are said to have happened inside the secretive communist state earlier this month "on a special order from Kim Jong-un" at a military academy in Pyongyang.
Jong-un became leader after the death of his father Kim Jong-II in 2011 - and has since used executions to keep his subordinates in check.
There are no other independent reports of these executions - and North Korea rarely comments on its executions to confirm them.
South Korea's Unification Ministry - which looks after North Korea-related matters - is yet to comment.
By Stephen Jones
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