Daily Dispatch

Kim’s half-brother begged for his life

Seoul MPs briefed on 2012 assassinat­ion bid

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THE half-brother of North Korean leader Kim JongUn, who was murdered in Malaysia, pleaded for his life after a failed assassinat­ion bid in 2012, lawmakers briefed by South Korea’s spy chief said yesterday.

Kim Jong-Nam died after reportedly being attacked by two women believed to be North Korean agents at Kuala Lumpur Internatio­nal Airport on Monday.

Jong-Nam, the eldest son of the late former leader Kim Jong-Il, was once seen as heir apparent but fell out of favour following an embarrassi­ng botched bid in 2001 to enter Japan on a forged passport and visit Disneyland.

He had since lived in virtual exile, mainly in the Chinese territory of Macau, while Jong-Un took over the isolated and nuclear-armed state after the death of his father in December 2011.

The North in 2012 tried to assassinat­e Jong-Nam – known to be a supporter of reform in Pyongyang – Seoul lawmakers said, following a closed-door briefing by the chief of the National Intelligen­ce Service, Lee Byung-Ho.

“According to [Lee] . . . there was one bid in 2012, and Jong-Nam in April 2012 sent a letter to Jong-Un saying ‘Please spare me and my family’,” Kim Byung-Kee, a member of the parliament­ary intelligen­ce committee, told reporters.

“It also said ‘We have nowhere to go . . . we know that the only way to escape is suicide’.”

He said Jong-Nam had little political support in the North and posed little threat to Jong-Un.

The assassinat­ion, if confirmed to have been the North’s work, is more an indication of Jong-Un’s “paranoid personalit­y” than a calculated move to remove a political threat, the legislator quoted the spy chief as saying.

Jong-Nam was the eldest son of Kim Jong-Il with his first wife, and in the deeply patriarcha­l North the first son is seen as the official heir of the family. The country’s founding father, Kim IlSung, passed on the helm to his first son, Kim Jong-Il, on his death in 1994.

But the succession instead went to Jong-Un, who was born to Jong-Il’s third wife – a potential taint in his legitimacy as leader.

Jong-Nam’s family – his former and current wives and three children – are living in Beijing and Macau under the protection of the Chinese authoritie­s, another intelligen­ce committee member, Lee Cheol-Woo, said.

He said Jong-Nam had entered Malaysia on February 6, a week before his death.

Jong-Nam’s murder was the highest-profile death under Kim Jong-Un’s regime since the execution of the leader’s uncle, Jang Song-Thaek, for treason in December 2013.

Jang, known to be close to China and an advocate of economic reform, played a key role in JongUn’s rise to power but his power was believed to have irritated the young ruler.

Jong-Nam – believed to have ties with Beijing’s elite – was a relatively outspoken figure, publicly criticisin­g Pyongyang’s political system on a few occasions.

The 45-year-old said he “personally opposed” the hereditary power transfer in his own family, during an interview with Japan’s Asahi TV in 2010.

One of his sons – Han-Sol – also described his uncle Jong-Un as a “dictator” in a rare interview with a Finnish TV station in 2012 while he was studying in Europe. — AFP

 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? DREADED LIFE: Kim Jong-Nam at Beijing airport in China in this photo taken by Kyodo in February 2007. He was murdered in Malaysia on Monday
Picture: REUTERS DREADED LIFE: Kim Jong-Nam at Beijing airport in China in this photo taken by Kyodo in February 2007. He was murdered in Malaysia on Monday
 ?? Picture: REUTERS ?? HOT OFF THE PRESS: A newspaper vendor arranges newspapers showing front pages with images of Kim Jong-Nam at a newsstand outside Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia yesterday
Picture: REUTERS HOT OFF THE PRESS: A newspaper vendor arranges newspapers showing front pages with images of Kim Jong-Nam at a newsstand outside Kuala Lumpur in Malaysia yesterday

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