Lethbridge Herald

Assassinat­ion mystery

ONE YEAR AFTER KIM’S KILLING, SUSPECTED MASTERMIND­S ARE NOWHERE TO BE FOUND

- Eileen Ng and Eric Talmadge

Lost in the glare of North Korea’s missile launches, rhetorical battles with Washington and charm offensive at the Winter Olympics, two women stand accused of a crime that could send them to the gallows — the stunning assassinat­ion of Kim Jong Un’s estranged half brother.

It’s a crime the young Southeast Asian women almost certainly had a part in — possibly without even knowing it.

But just as certainly, the slaying of Kim Jong Nam one year ago Tuesday must have required a bigger cast of characters. People who could do the meticulous planning, procure the deadly and exotic poison and carefully wait for the exact moment to act so no one would die other than the unwitting target in a crowded airport terminal in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia.

Mastermind­s, in other words. Profession­al killers.

And those suspects are all long gone.

Instead, the sole defendants in one of the highest-profile political hits in decades are Siti Aisyah, 25, of Indonesia and Doan Thi Huong, 29, of Vietnam. Both are accused of smearing the VX nerve agent on Kim Jong Nam’s face last Feb. 13. The poison, developed for military use, is so potent that Kim was dead within two hours.

From the start of their trial last October, the women, who before getting caught up in the assassinat­ion plot left rural poverty to work in Southeast Asia’s nightlife scene, have claimed they were duped into playing what they thought was a harmless prank for a hidden-camera show. They face a mandatory death sentence by hanging if convicted.

Lawyers for the women say their defence has been handicappe­d by a sloppy investigat­ion and by the very conspicuou­s absence of the suspected North Korean mastermind­s.

“As long as the North Korean suspects are away, the actual truth will never be proven. I sincerely believe that the girls should be acquitted because we have clearly shown that they are being used as scapegoats,” said Aisyah’s lawyer Gooi Soon Seng.

Both the prosecutio­n and defence agree the women could not have been acting entirely on their own, and that the crime was carried out as part of a plot by a group of North Korean agents who recruited, trained and supplied them with the VX nerve agent.

The prosecutio­n even has a pretty good idea who the suspected mastermind­s are.

Four North Korean suspects were seen on airport security cameras discarding their belongings and changing their clothing after the attack. The North Korean Embassy has also been implicated with an embassy official helping get flights out for the four men, and using the name of one of its citizens to buy a car that was used to take the suspects to the airport.

But Malaysian police and prosecutor­s have shied away from attaching any political motive to the killing. Malaysian officials have never officially accused Pyongyang of involvemen­t in Kim’s death. Instead, they have focused narrowly on simply proving the women’s guilt. Prosecutor­s contend the two knew they were handling poison, citing security camera footage showing them rushing to the washroom and holding their hands away from their bodies after the attack. “The Malaysian government wants it all to go away by trying to rush the trial and end it,” said James Chin, director of the Asia Institute at the University of Tasmania in Australia. “Once everything is under the bridge, which will take years, Malaysia and North Korea will likely resume normal relations. The Kim Jong Nam case will be just another footnote in history.” Kim, 46, was the eldest son of former North Korea leader Kim Jong Il and was once seen as the potential heir in the family that has ruled North Korea since its founding.

He had fallen out of favour and had been living abroad as the actual heir Kim Jong Un solidified his powerbase. But while Kim Jong Nam was not an obvious political threat, he may have been seen as a potential rival to his brother.

 ?? Associated Press photo ?? Vietnamese Doan Thi Huong, centre, is escorted by police as she arrives for a court hearing at Shah Alam court house in Shah Alam, Malaysia last week. Below, a combinatio­n of file photos shows Kim Jong Nam, left, the estranged halfbrothe­r of North...
Associated Press photo Vietnamese Doan Thi Huong, centre, is escorted by police as she arrives for a court hearing at Shah Alam court house in Shah Alam, Malaysia last week. Below, a combinatio­n of file photos shows Kim Jong Nam, left, the estranged halfbrothe­r of North...
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