The National - News

Kim’s half-brother assassinat­ed

Attack by female North Korean agents with poison needles

-

SEOUL // North Korean leader Kim Jong-un’s brother has been assassinat­ed in Malaysia.

Kim Jong-nam, 45, is thought to have been attacked by two female North Korean agents using poisoned needles while he was waiting at Kuala Lumpur airport for a flight to Macau. Jong- nam, Mr Kim’s elder half-brother, went to the airport clinic complainin­g that he had been sprayed with liquid and was in pain. He died on the way to Putrajaya Hospital.

The two assassins, agents of the North’s spy agency, the Reconnaiss­ance General Bureau, carried out the attack on Monday by taking advantage of a security loophole between Jong-nam’s bodyguards and Malaysian police at the airport. They then hailed a taxi and escaped.

The assassinat­ion was the highest-profile death under the Kim Jong-un regime since the execution of the leader’s uncle Jang Song-thaek in December 2013.

Mr Kim has staged a series of executions. He has been trying to strengthen his grip on power in the face of growing internatio­nal pressure over his country’s nuclear and missile programmes. The latest launch on Sunday of a new intermedia­te-range missile brought UN Security Council condemnati­on and vows of a strong response from US president Donald Trump. Jong- nam, who used to be called the “Little General” and was once heir-apparent to his father Kim Jong- il, fell from grace in 2001 after a spectacula­r blunder. He was embarrassi­ngly detained at a Tokyo airport while trying to enter Japan to visit Disneyland on a false Dominican Republic passport, accompanie­d by two women and a child.

He and his family afterwards lived in virtual exile in Macau, Singapore and China.

Born from his father’s relationsh­ip with the actress Sung Haerim, Jong-nam was a computer enthusiast, a fluent Japanese speaker and a student in both Russia and Switzerlan­d.

He lived in Pyongyang after finishing his overseas studies and was put in charge of overseeing North Korea’s informatio­n technology policy.

But the chubby eldest son of the supreme leader was already viewed as a political lightweigh­t even before he fell out of favour.

Jong-nam was an advocate of reform in the North, and once told a Japanese newspaper that he opposed his country’s dynastic power transfers.

He was close to his uncle Jang Song-thaek, once the North’s unofficial number two and political mentor of the current leader.

Jong-nam has been targeted in the past. In October 2012, South Korean prosecutor­s said a North Korean detained as a spy had admitted involvemen­t in a plot to stage a hit-and-run car accident in China in 2010. Jongnam was the intended victim.

In 2014, he had financial problems and was thrown out of a luxury hotel in Macau after running up a $15,000 debt.

The same year, he was seen at an Italian restaurant run by a Japanese businessma­n in Jakarta, and shuttled back and forth between Singapore, Indonesia, Malaysia and France.

South Korea warned last year of possible North Korean assassinat­ion attempts in its territory. There were previous attempts to assassinat­e Hwang Jang-yop, the North’s chief ideologue and former tutor to Kim Jong- il, who defected to the South in 1997 and died of natural causes in 2010.

 ?? AFP ?? Kim Jong-nam found himself out of favour with the establishm­ent in Pyongyang.
AFP Kim Jong-nam found himself out of favour with the establishm­ent in Pyongyang.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates