Kim suspect says family threatened
KUALA LUMPUR A North Korean chemist deported from Malaysia has accused police of threatening to kill his family unless he confessed to the assassination of the half-brother of North Korea’s leader, calling it a plot to tarnish his country’s honour.
Ri Jong Chol spoke to reporters in Beijing yesterday while on his way to Pyongyang. Malaysian authorities have said there is insufficient evidence to charge Ri over Kim Jong-nam’s killing at Kuala Lumpur’s airport on February 13.
Ri was detained four days after the attack but police have not said what they believed his role was.
Two women – one Indonesian, one Vietnamese – have been charged with murder after police said they smeared Kim’s face with VX, a banned nerve agent considered a weapon of mass destruction.
Ri said he wasn’t at the airport the day Kim was killed but that police accused him of being a mastermind behind the attack, and presented him with ‘‘fake evidence’’.
He said they showed him a picture of his wife and two children, who were staying with him in Kuala Lumpur, and threatened to kill them.
‘‘These men kept telling me to admit to the crime, and if not, my whole family would be killed, and you too won’t be safe. If you accept everything, you can live a good life in Malaysia,’’ Ri said. ‘‘This is when I realized that it was a trap ... they were plotting to tarnish my country’s reputation.’’
Police did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Immigration Director-General Mustafar Ali said Ri has been blacklisted from re-entering Malaysia.
Malaysia is looking for seven other North Korean suspects, four of whom are believed to have left the country on the day of the kill- ing. Three others, including an official at the North Korean Embassy and an employee of Air Koryo, North Korea’s national carrier, are believed to still be in Malaysia.
Police yesterday issued an arrest warrant for the Air Koryo employee, Kim Uk-il, but didn’t say why he was a suspect . Police said he arrived in Malaysia about two weeks before Kim was killed.
Kim’s death has unleashed a diplomatic battle between Malaysia and North Korea. Malaysia said this week it was scraping visa-free entry for North Koreans, while the Foreign Ministry said it was ‘‘greatly con- cerned’’ about the use of the nerve agent.
Malaysia has not directly accused North Korea of being behind the killing, but the ministry’s statement came hours after a North Korean envoy rejected a Malaysian autopsy finding that VX killed Kim.
Ri Tong-il, a former North Korean deputy ambassador to the United Nations, said the man probably died of a heart attack because he suffered from heart disease, diabetes and high blood pressure.
He said that if VX had been used, others besides Kim would have been killed or sickened. REUTERS Malaysian police have brushed off Ri’s claim of a heart attack and insist that Kim was murdered.
Malaysia’s finding that VX killed Kim has boosted speculation that North Korea orchestrated the attack. Experts say the oily poison was almost certainly produced in a sophisticated state weapons laboratory, and North Korea is widely believed to possess large quantities of chemical weapons.
North Korea is trying to retrieve Kim’s body, but has not acknowledged that the victim is Kim Jong-un’s half-brother. AP