
North Korea has launched an unprecedented inspection campaign targeting party documents submitted by local Workers’ Party of Korea (WPK) organizations following the Ninth Party Congress, with officials reporting rejection rates approaching 90% for paperwork sent to Pyongyang.
A source in South Pyongan province told Daily NK on Wednesday that the WPK Central Committee issued instructions in late March directing all provincial party organizations to hold practical training sessions on document preparation. The central party also formally notified local organizations that high-intensity inspections of all submitted materials would follow in the wake of the Ninth Congress.
The directive stems from a broader restructuring of governance around the WPK Secretariat after the Ninth Congress, held in February. That restructuring imposed stricter administrative procedures and tighter documentation standards on local party organizations nationwide. Intensive training sessions for staff at key departmental levels have since been announced.
Fear ripples through ranks over rejected party documents
The changes have put party organizations across South Pyongan province on high alert, including the Pyongsong city party committee.
“Among the party documents that local organizations in cities, counties and provinces have recently submitted to the central party, a significant number have been sent back without approval, at a rate approaching 90%,” the source said. He described the scrutiny as a “microscope-style inspection,” adding that individual sentence constructions, specific figures, and whether documents properly reflect party directives all come under challenge. This goes far beyond routine requests for supplementary paperwork, he said.
In the past, officials could smooth over minor documentary shortfalls through personal connections or bribes. Now the central party rejects any deviation from its guidelines immediately and without exception.
‘One wrong document and your fate changes’
The source attributed the tightening to what he called an “administrative perfectionism” aimed at reinforcing Kim Jong Un’s governing posture in the post-Ninth Congress period.
A particularly striking incident occurred on March 22, when the central party sent a large batch of submitted documents back en masse. Even Pyongyang officials described the episode as unprecedented. It put subordinate organizations on edge and sharpened fears about errors in their own submissions.
“Since the Ninth Party Congress, the moment a document comes back down, the official who drafted or approved it gets branded as incompetent or ideologically negligent,” the source said.
Officials found to fall short face removal from their posts or hyongmyonghwa, a North Korean punishment in which the state sends officials to rural production sites for forced labor and ideological re-education. The threat has driven officials nationwide to spend days agonizing over a single submission.
Frustration and fear are growing at the local level. Provincial, city and county party officials have been heard saying things like “the document inspection threshold feels like a sheer cliff” and “it’s better to be summoned and reprimanded in person than to have a document rejected, because that changes your fate,” the source said.
Military veterans who transitioned into party posts are struggling most, the source added. They find it hardest to adapt to the increasingly exacting administrative standards the central party now demands.
Reporting from inside North Korea
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