China Daily (Hong Kong)

Malaysia issues arrest warrant for Air Koryo staff over airport murder

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KUALA LUMPUR — Malaysian police issued an arrest warrant for an Air Koryo employee on Friday in connection with the investigat­ion into an airport murder case, Malaysia’s Bernama news agency reported.

Kim Uk-il, an employee of the national carrier for the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, was listed as a person of interest by the police along with a second secretary of the DPRK embassy.

The police said earlier that the two were still in Malaysia but declined to confirm whether they are were the DPRK embassy.

Police chief Khalid Abu Bakar said the police also sent a request via the Foreign Minis- try to the DPRK embassy to question second secretary Hyon Kwang-song, who is entitled to diplomatic immunity.

Also on Friday, Malaysia’s Immigratio­n Department said in a statement 47-year-old DPRK man Ri Jong-chol, who was arrested as a suspect after the killing, was handed over to the department from the police for deportatio­n to the DPRK.

Malaysia has indicted two female suspects for murdering a DPRK man with the passport of Kim Chol. If convicted, the two will be hanged.

DPRK on Thursday brushed off Malaysia’s investigat­ion result that shows the DPRK man died here was killed by chemical weapon, saying he likely died of heart attack.

Ri Tong-il, spokesman of a DPRK delegation to Malaysia, said the DPRK man had a history of heart decease, had received treatment from time to time and normally could not travel without medicine.

Ri claimed that medicine for heart disease, diabetes and high blood pressure were found in the man’s belongings.

Malaysia said the man was killed by nerve agent VX.

Describing the chemical as highly toxic, Ri raised questions over how the man died on the spot while the two suspects survived and police and medics who attended to the man were not contaminat­ed.

He said samples should be sent to the Organizati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons for verificati­on.

Ri said his delegation had met with Malaysian officials to settle the issue. “The DPRK’s request is simple, that is the return of the deceased body of the DPRK citizen as soon as possible,” he said.

Malaysia on Friday said that it will cooperate with the OPCW to bring the perpetrato­rs of the VX nerve agent attack to justice. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement that Malaysia “does not produce, stockpile, import, export or use any” toxic weapons listed in the convention concerning prohibitio­n of the chemical weapons.

The ministry said it strongly condemns the use of the VX nerve agent by anyone, anywhere and under any circumstan­ces. “Its use at a public place could have endangered the general public,” it said.

 ?? MOHD RASFAN / AFP ?? DPRK diplomat Ri Tong-il (left) addresses journalist­s outside the country’s embassy in Kuala Lumpur on Thursday.
MOHD RASFAN / AFP DPRK diplomat Ri Tong-il (left) addresses journalist­s outside the country’s embassy in Kuala Lumpur on Thursday.
 ?? ARON BERNSTEIN / GETTY IMAGES VIA AFP ?? A demonstrat­or holds a sign during a protest to call for the resignatio­n of US Attorney General Jeff Sessions on Thursday in Washington.
ARON BERNSTEIN / GETTY IMAGES VIA AFP A demonstrat­or holds a sign during a protest to call for the resignatio­n of US Attorney General Jeff Sessions on Thursday in Washington.

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