Saturday Star

WMD nerve agent VX ‘killed Kim Jong Nam’

Probe into origins of chemical

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KUALA LUMPUR: VX nerve agent, a chemical the UN classifies as a weapon of mass destructio­n, was used to kill the estranged half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in a bizarre murder in Malaysia last week.

Malaysian police said yesterday they were investigat­ing whether the VX – which is believed to be the most toxic known nerve agent and is banned globally except for research – was brought into the country or made there.

“If the amount of the chemical brought in was small, it would be difficult for us to detect,” police chief Khalid Abu Bakar told reporters.

Kim Jong Nam died on February 13, shortly after being accosted at the airport in the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur, by two women who wiped a chemical on his face as he prepared to board a flight to the Chinese territory of Macau.

South Korean and US officials have said they believe North Korean agents assassinat­ed Kim. He had been living with his family in Macau under Beijing’s protection and had spoken out against the North Korean regime.

The two women suspects – one Vietnamese and the other Indonesian – are in police detention along with a North Korean man. Seven other North Koreans are wanted in connection with the case, including a diplomat at the embassy in Kuala Lumpur.

Mal ay s i a ’ s c h e mic a l weapons analysis unit found traces of VX, or S-2 disopropyl­aminoethyl methylphos­phonothioa­te, on swabs taken from the eye and face of the victim, according to police.

“Other exhibits are under analysis,” Khalid said in a statement, citing a preliminar­y report.

Police have said the two women were paid to carry out the assault and had been told to wash their hands before fleeing the airport. They had rehearsed the attack in shopping malls before carrying it out on Kim.

One of the women had suffered from the effects of the chemical and had been vomiting, Khalid said.

Airport camera footage released on Monday by Japanese broadcaste­r Fuji TV shows the moment they assaulted Kim.

In later clips he is seen asking airport officials for medical help, and rubbing his eyes and stumbling as he entered an airport clinic.

Authoritie­s said he complained of dizziness and died on the way to hospital.

Authoritie­s raided an apartment in an upscale Kuala Lumpur suburb on Wednesday in connection with the killing, but no chemicals were found, said an official with direct knowledge of the matter.

VX is tasteless and odourless and is outlawed under the Chemical Weapons Convention, except for “research, medical or pharmaceut­ical purposes”. It can be manufactur­ed as a liquid, cream or aerosol.

Experts say it has no commercial uses.

“This is not something you make in a kitchen lab. This is something that is made in a very sophistica­ted chemicals weapons lab,” said Bruce Bennet, a senior defense researcher at the California-based RandCorpor­ation.

North Korea is believed to have the world’s third-largest stockpile of chemical weapons, according to the Nuclear Threat Initiative project, which analyses weapons of mass destructio­n.

South Korean analysts have identified sarin and VX as the focus of the North Korean chemical weapons programme.

VX in liquid form can be absorbed into the body through skin or eye contact and does not evaporate easily.

After giddiness and nausea, exposure to VX quickly progresses to convulsion­s and respirator­y failure before death, according to the US Centres for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

It can be fatal after 15 minutes, according to the US Army’s Edgewood Chemical Biological Centre.

Police chief Khalid said authoritie­s intended to sweep Kuala Lumpur airport, and other locations the suspects had visited, for “radioactiv­e” material.

VX is not known to contain radioactiv­e elements and Reuters calls to police for clarificat­ion went unanswered.

Malaysian authoritie­s on Thursday requested Interpol to put an alert out to apprehend four North Korean suspects who are believed to have fled from Malaysia on the day of the attack.

They also want to question the second secretary at the North Korean embassy, though he has diplomatic immunity.

The murder has strained relations between North Korea, which has been increasing­ly isolated in response to its nuclear and missile programmes, and Malaysia.

Malaysia has recalled its ambassador from Pyongyang for consultati­ons. – Reuters

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