The Star Malaysia

North Korea style – deny and attack

The regime’s idea of damage control might work at home but rarely, if ever, has Pyongyang managed to effectivel­y sway world opinion.

- By ERIC TALMADGE

FACED with the killing of its leader’s half brother in what appears to have all the trappings of a politicall­y motivated hit, North Korea is turning up the volume on a familiar defence: Flatly deny the allegation­s, viciously attack the accusers.

It’s a position the North has been in before, from dismissing UN reports outlining human rights abuses or the findings to disputing who threw the first punch in the Korean War.

With evidence emerging that seems to strongly implicate some kind of North Korea connection to the killing of Kim Jong-un’s estranged half brother Jong-nam, the North is intensifyi­ng its public attack on the officials in charge of the investigat­ion in Malaysia.

In its first mention of the case, state-run media denied on Thursday that North Korean agents mastermind­ed the killing and said the Malaysian investigat­ion was full of “holes and contradict­ions.”

The response came a day after Malaysian police said they were seeking two more North Koreans, including the second secretary of North Korea’s embassy in Kuala Lumpur, in connection with the Feb 13 killing of Jong-nam in an airport lobby.

North Korea’s ambassador in Malaysia has made similar statements to reporters. But the decision to carry the story in the North’s highly selective official media is significan­t because it reflects a level of concern in Pyongyang over the allegation­s and its desire to push harder with the counter-message of its own.

Pyongyang’s fiery and categori- cal denials and counter-allegation­s follow a well-establishe­d pattern: It has taken essentiall­y the same tack in response to allegation­s levelled at it going all the way back to who started the 1950-53 Korean War (Pyongyang claims it was attacked, not the attacker).

To this day, it also disputes as biased and politicall­y motivated the findings of an internatio­nal investigat­ion into the 2010 torpedoing of the Cheonan warship that left 46 South Koreans dead – calling it “fictitious” and an “intolerabl­e mockery.”

A particular­ly damning UN-backed report on human rights abuses that came out in 2014 continues to be written off by Pyongyang as based on the lies of “human scum” defectors eager to please Japan, the United States and South Korea in their plot to discredit the North’s social system.

More recently, it flipped the script by claiming South Korean agents had tricked a group of North Korean waitresses at a restaurant in China to defect.

Obfuscatin­g the South’s claim that the group defection indicated growing dissatisfa­ction in the North, Pyongyang accused Seoul of violating the women’s human rights by holding them against their will and is demanding their return.

Malaysian officials have not directly accused North Korea of being behind the killing, and Malaysia is one of the few countries with ties to the North. But they have arrested a North Korean man working at a Malaysian firm along with three other people and are searching for several more North Koreans. And, not surprising­ly, Malaysia has bristled at the North’s attacks on the integrity of its investigat­ion.

According to Malaysian officials, North Korean diplomats were informed of the death the day it occurred; it was not made public until a day later. The diplomats had been at the Putrajaya government hospital closest to the airport for two days before moving to the Kuala Lumpur hospital when the body was transferre­d there for an autopsy.

Malaysian officials say that although the embassy officials made no public comments for several days, they privately demanded custody of the body and strongly objected to an autopsy. Investigat­ors balked, saying they were following procedure.

Three days after the killing, Deputy Prime Minister Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi confirmed widespread reports in the media that the victim was Jong-nam, though he carried identifica­tion with a different name.

For North Korea, that’s the most sensitive of sensitive topics. The North has not acknowledg­ed the dead man is the half brother of its leader – or mentioned Jong-nam’s name – in any of its statements. Informatio­n about the family tree of North Korea’s rulers is tightly controlled and few North Koreans are aware that Jong-un even had an elder half brother.

Soon after Malaysia officially pushed that button, Kang Chol, North Korea’s ambassador in Malaysia, turned up at the morgue to demand custody of the body. He wasn’t allowed in.

Kang then did what North Korean diplomats almost never do - he went straight to the cameras and gave an unexpected press conference, accusing Malaysia of “trying to conceal something” and “colluding with hostile forces.” He also pre-emptively said the North would “categorica­lly reject” any autopsy carried out “unilateral­ly and excluding our attendance.”

His scorched-earth approach may have backfired. Malaysia’s Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak vowed on Tuesday that his country will not be cowed and is resolute in getting to the bottom of the killing.

“Malaysia will stand firm,” he said. “We will be guided by the principle of the rule of law.”

The North now also faces another problem: the South Korean military has reportedly started using loudspeake­rs to broadcast news of the killing across the Demilitari­sed Zone. Not many North Koreans will actually hear those broadcasts, and many of those who do won’t believe them. But some just might. — AP

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