Madeleine Albright, the first woman to serve as Secretary of State in the United States, has died of cancer.

She was 84 years old.

Mr. Olbright was born in 1937 in Prague, the capital of Czechoslovakia at the time, and she emigrated to the United States after the establishment of the Communist Party government.

From 1978 to 1981, he worked as a staff member under President Brzezinski's aide in charge of security policy at the White House.



And in 1993, after she was appointed UN Ambassador in the first term of the Clinton administration, in 1997, her second term, she became the first woman to become Secretary of State.



As her Secretary of State, Mr. Olbright promoted the expansion of NATO-North Atlantic Treaty Organization and focused on achieving accession to countries in eastern Europe.



She also said in 1999 that she would avoid a humanitarian crisis as the clash between Albanian residents seeking independence in Kosovo and Serbian security forces trying to stop it intensified. Pushed the intervention.



In 2000, she visited North Korea for the first time as an incumbent minister in the United States, and she met with then-General Secretary Kim Jong-il in person to discuss issues such as missile development.



According to a statement posted on Twitter by her family, Albright died of cancer on the 23rd while her family and friends were watching.