Houston Chronicle Sunday

Intrigue intensifie­s in killing of N. Korean leader’s brother

Accused killer told authoritie­s she was part of prank

- By Eileen Ng

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — At a hospital morgue in Malaysia’s capital, the tightly guarded corpse of a middle-aged man has become the focus of a dizzying case of internatio­nal intrigue involving five countries, combative North Korean diplomats and an apparently duped female assassin.

Investigat­ors are still trying to piece together details of what appears to be the brazen assassinat­ion of Kim Jong Nam, the half brother of North Korea’s mercurial ruler and an exiled member of the country’s elite. Malaysian police said Saturday that they had arrested a fourth suspect, a 46-year-old North Korean man.

Kim, who had been estranged from his younger half sibling for years, was attacked at Kuala Lumpur Internatio­nal Airport on Monday. A rotund man in his mid-40s, he told medical workers at the airport that he had been sprayed in the face with a chemical. He grew dizzy, suffered a seizure and was dead within hours, Malaysian officials said.

Without citing much in the way of evidence, observers including South Korea pointed to the obvious culprit in Monday’s attack: Kim’s half brother, Kim Jong Un, who has executed or purged a slew of high-level officials since taking power in 2011.

Possible 2nd autopsy

As the rumor mill swirled, Malaysia arrested four people over the course of the week — including an Indonesian woman who told investigat­ors she was duped into thinking she was part of a comedy show prank.

North Korean officials made no public comments for several days, but they privately demanded custody of Kim’s body and strongly objected to an autopsy.

The Malaysians went ahead with the autopsy anyway, saying they were simply following procedure.

On Friday night, North Korea’s ambassador to Malaysia broke his silence. At an unusual news conference held close to mid- night outside the morgue, Ambassador Kang Chol said Malaysia may be “trying to conceal something” and “colluding with hostile forces.”

“We will categorica­lly reject the result of the postmortem,” Kang said.

The results of the autopsy have not been released publicly, but a Malaysian official with knowledge of the investigat­ion said the results were inconclusi­ve and that there was a second autopsy Friday night.

Malaysian police official Abdul Samah Mat, however, denied that the second autopsy had taken place.

Seeking DNA samples

Less than a week after Kim’s death, the case had already reached well beyond Malaysia to North Korea, South Korea and Indonesia, along with Macau, where Kim lived with his family, and Vietnam, which was looking into whether another of the suspects was a citizen.

The suspects in Malaysian custody are: Siti Aisyah, the Indonesian woman; another woman, who carried Vietnamese travel documents and was seen on closed circuit television footage in a shirt with “LOL” emblazoned across the front; a man investigat­ors said is Aisyah’s boyfriend; and the North Korean man, who was arrested Friday night.

Malaysia is seeking DNA samples from Kim Jong Nam’s immediate family.

He is believed to have two sons and a daughter with two women living in Beijing and Macau.

Kim reportedly fell out of favor in Pyongyang in 2001, when he was caught trying to enter Japan on a false passport to visit Tokyo Disneyland. He and his younger brother have the same father, the late Kim Jong Il.

 ?? Alexandra Radu / Associated Press ?? Medical staff leave the forensic department at Kuala Lumpur Hospital in Malaysia on Saturday. The body of Kim Jong Nam, who died on Monday in that nation, is guarded there.
Alexandra Radu / Associated Press Medical staff leave the forensic department at Kuala Lumpur Hospital in Malaysia on Saturday. The body of Kim Jong Nam, who died on Monday in that nation, is guarded there.

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