The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Jong-nam murder rekindled interest on incident 39 years ago

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BANGKOK: The murder of Kim Jong-nam at the KL Internatio­nal Airport 2 (klia 2) three weeks ago, has somewhat rekindled interest from a Japanese associatio­n on a mysterious incident that happened 39 years ago.

On Aug 20,1978, four young Malaysian and a Singaporea­n women disappeare­d mysterious­ly after they were asked by a "Japanese" man to join a party on a boat off the republic's coast.

The four Malaysian women who disappeare­d without a trace until now are Yeng Yoke Fun, 22, Yap Me Leng, 22, Seetoh Tai Thim, 19, Margaret Ong Guat Choo, 19 while the Singaporea­n was Diana Ng Kum Yim, 24.

Although both incidents occurred nearly four decades apart, they shared one uncanny similarity, that of deep suspicion that North Korean agents were behind the crime allegedly on orders from their supreme leader.

"We should investigat­e the case again (the 1978 dissapeara­nce incident), we are willing to assist relatives of the four Malaysian women in finding more informatio­n," said the Associatio­n for the Rescue of North Korea Abductees (ARNKA) director Tomoharu Ebihara to Bernama recently.

Despite the scant informatio­n available on the four Malaysian women and a gap of 39 years since the day of the incident, he remains optimistic that someday he and his colleagues will unravel the mystery.

According to Ebihara, informatio­n on the possible existence of Malaysian abductees in North Korea was derived from testimonie­s of South Korean actress, Choi Eun-hee and former United States' soldier, Charles Robert Jenkins.

Eun-hee was abducted in Hong Kong in 1978 while Jenkins deserted his unit and crossed into North Korea in 1965 and lived in the Communist country until 2004 before travelling to Japan to link up with a woman.

"According to Jenkins, he saw a picture of Yoke Fun (one of the women who disappeare­d in Singapore) and remember meeting a similar woman at an amusement park in Pyongyang between 1980 and 1981," said Ebihara.

Eun-hee who had lived in Pyongyang until 1986 told she heard from a woman that a Malaysian couple lived in a separate residence in Pyongyang during her stay in North Korea's capital, said the activist.

"That is the only informatio­n we have on the possible abductees from Malaysia," he said, adding that informatio­n provided by Eunhee and Jenkins were credible.

According to Ebihara, citizens from 12 countries were alleged to have been kidnapped by North Korean agents including from Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, Thailand, Jordan, Lebanon, Romania and France.

He said non-government­al organisati­ons in Japan believed about 300 Japanese were abducted by North Korean agents, despite the official tally given by the government put it at 18 people.

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