The Korea Times

Where in the world is Kim Han-sol?

- By Rachel Lee rachel@ktimes.com

Speculatio­n is rampant over the whereabout­s of Kim Jong-nam’s son, Kim Han-sol, and other family members, with the Malaysian police waiting for their assistance for a DNA test.

Media reports say they could be under China’s protection in Macau. No family members have come forward since the assassinat­ion of the half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un in Malaysia last week. China is also keeping mum about whether it is protecting them.

Earlier this week, the 21-year-old son, Han-sol, was said to have arrived in Kuala Lumpur, but Malaysian authoritie­s said any of family members have yet to visit the Kuala Lumpur Hospital, where Kim Jong-nam’s body is being kept.

There is speculatio­n that the Chinese government or Macau authori- ties could have helped Kim Han-sol to depart from Macau in secret. Kim Han-sol was believed to be living in an apartment in Macau with his mother Ri Hye-kyong and his 19-year-old sister Kim Sol-hui under China’s protection.

It is also possible that Kim Han-sol has already arrived in Malaysia through a VIP passage at the airport.

Observers say, however, that Kim Han-sol would not visit Malaysia due to fear of himself as well as other family members becoming Kim Jong-un’s next targets. Kim Han-sol is believed to be the last surviving male of the “Baekdu” descent flowing from North Kore- an state founder Kim Il-sung to Kim Jong-il and his father Kim Jong-nam.

Some watchers say Pyongyang could have already sent a warning message to the Ri family threatenin­g to execute them, if any of them were found to have provided a DNA sample, which would have made it difficult for Kim Han-sol to cooperate with Kuala Lumpur.

“Once Malaysia obtains a DNA sample, North Korea will start pressuring Kim Han-sol’s mother Ri Hye-kyong in any possible way,” a North Korea defector said.

Born in Pyongyang in 1995, Kim Han-sol moved to Macau after his father reportedly fell out of favor with his grandfathe­r Kim Jong-il in the early 2000s.

Kim Jong-nam was killed after being poisoned by two women as he was preparing to board a flight at Kuala Lumpur Internatio­nal Airport, Feb. 13. At least eight North Korean nationals were involved in the assassinat­ion, according to Malaysian police.

The North, however, has called the case the death of “a citizen of the DPRK bearing a diplomatic passport” through its Korean Central News Agency (KCNA), referring to the dead man as “Kim Chol,” the name on the passport found with Kim Jong-nam. It said the person “fell into a state of shock before boarding an airliner and died on the way to a hospital in Malaysia.”

The Malaysian media reported Wednesday that police officials flew to Macau to meet Kim Han-sol, who had agreed to provide a DNA sample. But the police chief denied the reports the next day.

His sister Sol-hui may visit Malaysia on Sunday and provide DNA samples for the identifica­tion process, The Telegraph reported Thursday quoting a Malaysian security source.

 ??  ?? Kim Han-sol, son of late Kim Jong-nam
Kim Han-sol, son of late Kim Jong-nam

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Korea, Republic