The Borneo Post

M’sian minister urges probe of fund transfers to N. Korea

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KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia should investigat­e the possible transfer of funds to North Korea’s leadership, the deputy home minister said on Tuesday, after Reuters reported that the head of a Malaysian conglomera­te had for years funneled cash to Pyongyang.

Reuters on Monday cited a North Korean defector as saying that Han Hun Il, the North Korean founding chief executive of Malaysia Korea Partners ( MKP), had funneled money to Pyongyang’s leadership, the central committee of the ruling Workers’ Party, for the past two decades.

MKP’s bank subsidiary in Pyongyang is also under investigat­ion by the United Nations for possible violations of sanctions barring foreign companies from setting up joint ventures with, or taking an ownership interest in, North Korean banks.

The reports risk damaging Kuala Lumpur’s reputation as a financial centre, deputy home minister Datuk Nur Jazlan Mohamed told Reuters, and called on the central bank to investigat­e if there had been any misuse of the country’s banking systems.

“We have to investigat­e if, among other things, North Korea was using the friendship with Malaysia as a conduit for illicit activities,” he said.

The central bank did not immediatel­y respond to Reuters’ request for comments.

Malaysian police should conduct their own investigat­ion into MKP and Han to determine if any crime had been committed, Nur Jazlan added.

Last month, police chief Tan Sri Khalid Abu Bakar said authoritie­s would assist the UN in its investigat­ion into MKP.

In February, Reuters reported that North Korea’s spy agency was running an arms export operation out of Malaysia.

Close ties between Malaysia and North Korea have come under scrutiny following the assassinat­ion of Kim Jong Nam, the elder half- brother of North Korea’s ruler, with the highly toxic VX nerve agent on Feb. 13 in the Malaysian capital of Kuala Lumpur. — Reuters

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