Kim Yong Nam, North Korea’s former ceremonial head of state and a lifelong supporter of the ruling dynasty, has died aged 97, according to state media. He held the role of president of Pyongyang’s rubber-stamp Supreme People’s Assembly from 1998 to 2019. Kim Yong Nam served in various diplomatic roles under the regime of the country’s founder Kim Il Sung, his son Kim Jong Il, and his grandson Kim Jong Un, although he was not related to the family.He died of multiple organ failure on 3 November, according to the North’s Korean Central News Agency (KCNA). The agency described him as an “old-generation revolutionary who left extraordinary achievements in the development history of our party and country”. A state funeral has been held for him.Kim Yong Nam was born when the Korean peninsula was under Japanese colonial rule, into what KCNA called a family of “anti-Japanese patriots”. He attended the then brand new Kim Il Sung University in Pyongyang and also studied in Moscow, before beginning his career in the 1950s.Starting out as a low-ranking official in the ruling party, he rose to become foreign minister and then served as chairman of the Supreme People’s Assembly for nearly all of Kim Jong Il’s reign. Even as real power remained in the hands of the ruling Kim family, Kim Yong Nam was often seen as the face of North Korea on the international stage.In 2018, he led a North Korean delegation to South Korea during the Winter Olympics, where he met the South’s then-president Moon Jae-in.Kim Yo Jong, …