New Straits Times

COP SUFFERED SIDE EFFECTS, COURT TOLD

He had seized the clothes worn by Indonesian accused

- KHAIRAH N. KARIM SHAH ALAM news@nst.com.my

AN arresting officer, who seized the clothes worn by Indonesian Siti Aisyah on the day North Korean Kim Chol was killed, suffered the side effects of VX nerve agent for a week, the High Court heard.

Traumatise­d by his experience, Superinten­dent Nasri Mansor who was a witness in the murder trial, which has entered its 17th day, initially, did not dare touch the exhibits which contained Siti Aisyah’s grey sleeveless top, a pair of denim pants, scarf and a pair of shoes.

“I am afraid to touch them (the clothes of Siti Aisyah) because the first time I touched the clothes, I experience­d some symptoms.

“When I seized the clothes I was not wearing gloves as I did not know (that there were degradatio­n products of VX on the clothes),” he said.

However, Siti Aisyah’s counsel Gooi Soon Seng insisted that the exhibits be opened for identifica­tion as parts of the clothes that contained VX had been cut off.

Judge Datuk Azmi Ariffin then allowed the exhibits to be opened in the courtroom and advised those who were sitting near the exhibits to wear gloves and masks for precaution.

Nasri, who is attached to the Selangor police contingent headquarte­rs, was startled when Gooi took the scarf and went towards him in the witness dock.

In the previous proceeding­s, chemical weapon analyst Dr S. Raja had advised the court to not open the exhibits in the courtroom as the nerve agent on the exhibits was still active and could be harmful.

The exhibits then had to be identified at the Department of Chemistry in Petaling Jaya as a precaution­ary measure.

Earlier during examinatio­n-in-chief by deputy public prosecutor Muhamad Iskandar Ahmad, Nasri testified that Siti Aisyah was found lying on a bed in a hotel room of which the door was left ajar, three days after Kim Chol’s murder.

The witness said upon receiving informatio­n on the accused at 1.30am on Feb 16, he went to Flamingo Hotel in Ampang with his team, which consisted of six personnel.

“We arrived at the hotel at 2.15am and took the elevator to the third floor to room number 365.

“We saw that the room door was slightly ajar. I knocked on the door first before entering. When I entered the room, I saw a woman lying on the bed… the room was bright with all the lights switched on,” he said.

Nasri said during the arrest, Siti Aisyah was shocked and asked what offence she had committed.

“I told her that she was suspected to be involved in a murder case at klia2 on Feb 13 before seizing two handphones and US$300 (RM1,254) in three US$100 notes, a pair of Rayban sunglasses, her purse, a Louis Vuitton handbag, and a pair of shoes.

“I also seized another pair of shoes, a pair of denim pants, a scarf, a grey sleeveless T-shirt and the passport belonging to the accused at the hotel room.”

Nasri said the items were placed in a black plastic bag and Siti Aisyah was handcuffed and taken to the Sepang district police headquarte­rs.

He said they arrived at the Sepang police headquarte­rs at 4.15am.

Nasri was testifying in the trial of Siti Aisyah, 25, and Vietnamese Doan Thi Huong, 28, who are charged with murdering Kim Chol, along with four others still at large, at the Kuala Lumpur Internatio­nal Airport 2 (klia2) on Feb 13.

During cross-examinatio­n by Gooi, Nasri denied that two women known as May and Wati were renting the hotel room together with Siti Aisyah since a year ago.

Gooi: During the raid, May and Wati were lying on the bed, while Siti Aisyah was sitting on the bed?

Nasri: I disagree.

Trial continues tomorrow.

Kim Chol, 45, who was claimed to be Kim Jong-nam, the estranged half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, was killed by the highly toxic liquid nerve agent VX.

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