Daily Dispatch

Malaysians held ‘hostage’ in N Korea

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NORTH Korea banned Malaysians from leaving the country yesterday, triggering a tit-for-tat response from Kuala Lumpur which said its citizens were effectivel­y being held “hostage” in the row over the assassinat­ion of Kim Jong-Nam.

Pyongyang’s extraordin­ary move came as it faced growing internatio­nal condemnati­on for a volley of missiles it fired into the Sea of Japan, defying stringent global sanctions aimed at halting its weapons programme.

Yesterday’s developmen­ts marked a dramatic heightenin­g of tensions with Malaysia three weeks after the half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un was murdered at an airport with the banned VX nerve agent.

The North decided to “temporaril­y ban the exit of Malaysian citizens in the DPRK”, the official news agency KCNA said, citing the foreign ministry.

The prohibitio­n would remain in place “until the safety of the diplomats and citizens of the DPRK in Malaysia is fully guaranteed through the fair settlement of the case that occurred in Malaysia”.

The Malaysian foreign ministry said 11 of its citizens were currently in North Korea, including three embassy staff, six family members and two others who work for the UN’s World Food Programme.

Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak condemned the ban, and said he was ordering a similar ban on the movement of “all North Korean citizens in Malaysia”.

Analysts said they could number around 1 000.

The home ministry had previously indicated the ban only affected diplomats and embassy officials.

“This abhorrent act, effectivel­y holding our citizens hostage, is in total disregard of all internatio­nal law and diplomatic norms,” Najib said.

“As a peace-loving nation, Malaysia is committed to maintainin­g friendly relations with all countries.

“However, protecting our citizens is my first priority, and we will not hesitate to take all measures necessary when they are threatened.”

Pyongyang and Kuala Lumpur had unusually strong links for years, but ties have rapidly degenerate­d in the weeks since Kim Jong-Nam was attacked at a Malaysian airport by two women who wiped a deadly chemical on his face.

Seoul has blamed Pyongyang for the assassinat­ion, and Kuala Lumpur wants to question several North Koreans, although the only one it arrested was released last week for lack of evidence.

The North has never confirmed the dead man’s identity, but has denounced the Malaysian investigat­ion as an attempt to smear it.

Kuala Lumpur announced the expulsion of the North’s ambassador at the weekend. He flew to Beijing on Monday, after launching a final verbal assault on his hosts.

Kang Chol slammed what he called a “pre-targeted investigat­ion by the Malaysian police”.

Pyongyang retaliated by formally ordering out his counterpar­t.

According to KCNA, the foreign ministry expressed hopes that the Malaysian government would solve the issue “as early as possible” from a position of “goodwill” and “setting store by and developing the bilateral relations”.

Malaysian diplomats and nationals in the North “may work and live normally under the same conditions and circumstan­ces as before” while the travel ban is in place, it added.

The escalating row comes as the United Nations Security Council scheduled an emergency meeting to coordinate the global response to the North’s latest missile launches, which KCNA said yesterday were trial runs at hitting “the bases of the US imperialis­t aggressor forces in Japan”.

Three of the four projectile­s fired on Monday came down provocativ­ely close to Japan, in what observers said was a test of US President Donald Trump’s inchoate North Korea policy.

In phone calls to his Japanese and South Korean counterpar­ts, Trump reaffirmed Washington’s “ironclad commitment” to its allies.

The US will demonstrat­e to Pyongyang that there were “very dire consequenc­es” for its actions, the White House said in a statement.

Under UN resolution­s, Pyongyang is barred from any use of ballistic missile technology, but six sets of sanctions since its first nuclear test in 2006, have failed to halt its drive for what it insists are defensive weapons. — AFP

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