Daily Dispatch

Envoy wanted over Kim killing

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DETECTIVES probing the assassinat­ion of Kim Jong-Un’s half-brother want to question a North Korean diplomat, Malaysia’s top policeman said yesterday.

Investigat­ors have put five North Koreans in the frame for last week’s brazen killing of Kim Jong-Nam at Kuala Lumpur Internatio­nal Airport and have said they are seeking three more for questionin­g.

They include the embassy’s second secretary, Hyon Kwang Song, as well as a North Korean airline employee called Kim Uk Il, Khalid Abu Bakar said.

“We have written to the ambassador to allow us to interview both of them. We hope the Korean embassy will cooperate with us and allow us to interview them quickly. If not, we will compel them to come to us,” he said.

Jong-Nam died on February 13 soon after he was attacked as he waited for a plane to Macau. Leaked CCTV footage from the airport shows the chubby 45-year-old being approached by two women, one of whom grabs him from behind and appears to shove a cloth in his face.

Moments later Jong-Nam is seen seeking help from airport staff, who direct him to a clinic, where he apparently slumps in a chair.

Malaysian police say he suffered a seizure and died before he reached hospital, seemingly from the effects of a toxin.

Seoul has said from the start that Pyongyang was behind the murder, citing a “standing order” from JongUn to kill his elder sibling and a failed assassinat­ion bid in 2012.

Asked whether the five North Korean suspects had mastermind­ed the attack, Khalid said he believed they were “heavily involved” in the murder. Four of the men fled the country on the day of the killing and returned to Pyongyang, he said, while one remains in custody in Malaysia.

The police chief dismissed claims the two women had believed the attack was a made-for-TV prank.

“Of course they knew” it was a poison attack, Khalid said. “I think you have seen the video, right? The lady was moving away with her hands towards the bathroom. She was very aware that it was toxic and that she needed to wash her hands.”

Khalid said Vietnamese suspect Doan Thi Huong, 28, and Indonesian Siti Aishah, 25, had been trained to swab the man’s face, practising in Kuala Lumpur before the assault at the airport. The Indonesian’s Malaysian boyfriend has been released, he said.

North Korea’s envoy yesterday called for Malaysia to release the two women and the North Korean citizen from police custody. — AFP

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? MURDER SUSPECTS: Nguyen Thi Vy, mother-in-law of Doan Thi Huong, looks at photograph­s of the four arrested suspects
Picture: AFP MURDER SUSPECTS: Nguyen Thi Vy, mother-in-law of Doan Thi Huong, looks at photograph­s of the four arrested suspects

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