Cape Times

Recent events prove that North Korea’s losing the last of its friends

- Shannon Ebrahim

NORTH KOREA is losing the few friends it has, thick and fast. North Korea’s two traditiona­l allies, China and Malaysia, are now both deploying strongarm tactics against the regime, whose leader Kim Jong-un is strongly suspected to have been behind the assassinat­ion of his half-brother Kim Jong-nam in Malaysia, and continues to launch missile tests in the region.

The excesses of the regime are no longer tolerable even to its benefactor­s. In the wake of Kim Jongnam’s death, China banned all coal exports from North Korea for the rest of the year, which is North Korea’s biggest export worth US$1.2 billion (R16bn) – most of which goes to China.

The Malaysian authoritie­s have expelled North Korea’s ambassador, and both countries have banned the other’s citizens from leaving their borders. When North Korea was cut off from the world in the 1990s, it had traded through Malaysia. Now, even that relationsh­ip seems doomed.

Malaysia believes Kim Jongnam’s death was caused by exposure to the lethal nerve agent VX, and it has implicated eight North Koreans in the attack at its airport. If Kim Jong-nam’s son, who claims to be in hiding with his family, is able to get a DNA sample to the Malaysian authoritie­s, it may prove that it was in fact his father who was killed, contrary to North Korea’s position that it was someone else.

China would take particular exception to Kim Jong-nam’s murder given that he was living under the protection of Chinese security officials, and was en-route back to his home in Macau. China’s relations with North Korea have grown increasing­ly strained since Kim Jong-un took power in 2011, and as leader, he has yet to visit China.

Kim Jong-nam’s murder is understand­ably of particular concern to North Korea’s neighbours as it shows the North’s willingnes­s to eliminate its enemies anywhere in the world with impunity, and its preparedne­ss to use its lethal chemical weapons, of which it possesses 5 000 tons. North Korea is not party to the Chemical Weapons Convention, and if it was behind the use of VX in the attack on Kim Jongnam, it sets a dangerous precedent of carrying such chemical agents across borders.

VX is not commercial­ly available, and its use suggests a foreign government was behind this attack. Malaysia has also claimed that the woman who smeared it on Kim Jong-nam’s face had symptoms of also being affected by limited exposure in that she was repeatedly vomiting.

The Malaysians claim she washed her hands immediatel­y following the attack. If she wore protective gloves it would explain why she survived carrying out the attack.

The targeting abroad of North Korea’s detractors has a long history. In 1983, North Korean agents targeted South Korean President Chun Doo-hwan with a bomb, but it went off minutes before the president’s arrival, killing numerous others. In 1996, a South Korean diplomat in Vladivosto­k was killed with poisoning – the same poison that was carried by North Korean commandos whose sub ran aground in South Korea the month before.

In 1997, a cousin of Kim Jongnam, Yi Han-young, defected to South Korea, changing his name and undergoing plastic surgery. After writing a book about Kim Jong-Il’s family, he was shot in the head.

Ever since Kim Jong-un ascended to power, he allegedly had a standing order issued for the execution of Kim Jong- nam, who he feared could have been used in a regime-change plot by China or the West as a potential successor.

Kim Jong-nam had been critical of the third-generation succession, but despite the fact that he had articulate­d that he had no interest in playing a leadership role in North Korea, it is suggested that Kim Jongun felt the need to neutralise any potential threat.

It is reported that the leader has ordered the purge of several hundred officials during his five years in office. One of the most notable was the execution of his mentor and uncle Jang Song Thaek, along with members of his family in 2013. When Jang’s wife protested against her husband’s execution the following year, she was poisoned.

In April 2014, Jang’s ally – the deputy public security minister – was allegedly executed by a flame thrower. In the same month, the vice-minister in the army was executed with a mortar round. In April 2015, it was reported the Defence Minister was shot by anti-aircraft guns in front of hundreds of onlookers for “falling asleep”, and in August 2016, a top education official was allegedly executed with a high-calibre machine gun for “falling asleep in a meeting”.

Amid all the controvers­y surroundin­g North Korea’s missile tests and possible murder of Kim Jong-nam, the foreign minister of North Korea is coming to South Africain April, en-route to his visit to Namibia. It might not be the time forthe red carpet.

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