Las Vegas Review-Journal

Kim’s half brother died from banned VX poison

Pathologis­t testifies in Malaysian airport attack

- By Eileen Ng The Associated Press

SHAH ALAM, Malaysia — A Malaysian government pathologis­t testified Tuesday at the trial of two women accused of killing the estranged half brother of North Korea’s leader that the banned VX nerve agent caused his death.

His report, submitted as evidence at the trial in Malaysia’s High Court, stated that VX was found not just on Kim Jong Nam’s face and eyes but also in his blood, urine, clothing and bag. The 11-page report said an examinatio­n of Kim’s body showed damage to his organs, including part of the brain, both lungs, his liver and spleen.

Siti Aisyah of Indonesia and Doan Thi Huong of Vietnam pleaded not guilty on Monday, the trial’s first day, to killing Kim on Feb. 13 at a crowded Kuala Lumpur airport terminal. They are accused of wiping VX on Kim’s face in an assassinat­ion widely thought to have been orchestrat­ed by North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

The women have said they thought they were playing a harmless prank for a hidden-camera TV show and were tricked by men suspected of being North Korean agents.

Mohamad Shah Mahmood, one of two pathologis­ts who examined Kim’s body, told the court that “the cause of death is acute VX nerve agent poisoning,” and that there were no other contributi­ng factors.

The post-mortem report said toxicology tests found traces of drugs in Kim’s body used to treat diabetes, hypertensi­on and gout. The report gave Kim’s age as 46 and his name as Kim Chol, the pseudonym he used on the North Korean passport he carried at the time of his death.

Kim weighed 211 pounds and had tattoos on his chest, arms and back, including a colored dragon head breathing fire and a man with two fishlike figures, the report said.

North Korea has a history of ordering killings of people it views as threats to its regime and its chemical weapons arsenal is believed to include VX. Its government has denied any role in the killing and hasn’t even acknowledg­ed the dead man was Kim Jong Nam.

The post-mortem report concurred with the testimony of a Malaysian government pathologis­t, who said Kim had extremely low levels of an enzyme vital for nervous system function in his body due to poisoning.

Chemical pathologis­t Nur Ashikin Othman told the court on Tuesday that tests on Kim’s blood showed a very low level of 344 units per liter of cholineste­rase enzyme, which breaks down neurotrans­mitters in the body that send signals to the brain and control the muscles. The normal level is above 5,300 units per liter, she said.

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 ?? Vincent Thian ?? The Associated Press Doan Thi Huong of Vietnam is escorted by police Tuesday as she leaves the courthouse in Shah Alam, Malaysia. Thi Huong and Siti Aisyah of Indonesia are charged in the poison killing of the half brother of North Korea leader Kim...
Vincent Thian The Associated Press Doan Thi Huong of Vietnam is escorted by police Tuesday as she leaves the courthouse in Shah Alam, Malaysia. Thi Huong and Siti Aisyah of Indonesia are charged in the poison killing of the half brother of North Korea leader Kim...

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