Bangkok Post

Suspect in poison attack was paid $90

POLICE LAUNCH CITY RAIDS AS ASSASSINAT­ION PROBE WIDENS

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>> KUALA LUMPUR: The Indonesian woman who is one of the suspects in the killing of North Korean ruler Kim Jong-un’s half brother said she was paid US$90 (3,200 baht) for what she believed was a prank, an Indonesian official said yesterday.

Siti Aisyah also told authoritie­s she did not want her parents to see her in custody, Andriano Erwin, Indonesia’s deputy ambassador to Malaysia, said one day after Malaysia revealed that VX nerve agent was used in the bizarre killing at Kuala Lumpur’s airport.

“She doesn’t want her family to get sad to see her condition,” Mr Erwin said after a 30-minute meeting with Ms Aisyah. “She only delivered a message through us to her father and mother not to be worried and take care of their health.”

The public poisoning of Kim Jong-nam, which took place on Feb 13 amid crowds of travellers at the airport, appeared to be a well-planned hit. Kim was dead within hours of the attack, in which two women went up behind him and appeared to smear something on to his face.

Ms Aisyah, 25, has said previously that she was duped into taking part in the attack, but Malaysian police say she and the other female suspect, a Vietnamese woman who also is in custody, knew what they were doing.

The revelation that VX nerve agent killed Kim has boosted speculatio­n that North Korea had dispatched a hit squad to Malaysia to kill Kim, whose younger half-brother is Kim Jong-un.

The thick, oily poison was almost certainly produced in a sophistica­ted state weapons laboratory, experts say, and is banned under internatio­nal treaties. North Korea, a prime suspect in the case, never signed that treaty, and has spent decades developing a complex chemical weapons programme.

Though Kim Jong-nam was not an obvious political threat to his sibling, he may have been seen as a potential rival in the country’s dynastic dictatorsh­ip.

Malaysia hasn’t directly accused the North Korean government of being behind the attack, but officials have said four North Korean men provided the two women with the poison. The four fled Malaysia shortly after the killing.

Yesterday, police confirmed that a raid earlier in the week on the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur was part of the investigat­ion. Senior police official Abdul Samah Mat, who is handling the investigat­ion, did not specify what authoritie­s found there, but said the items were being tested for traces of chemicals.

Kim Jong-nam, who had been living abroad for years, was approached by the two women on Feb 13 as he waited for a flight home to Macau. In grainy surveillan­ce footage, the women appear to rub something on to his face before walking away in separate directions.

Malaysian police said they had been trained to go immediatel­y to the washroom and clean their hands.

Both women seen in the video are in custody.

VX is an extremely powerful poison, with an amount no larger than a few grains of salt enough to kill.

An odourless chemical, it can be inhaled, swallowed or absorbed through the skin.

Then, in anywhere from a few seconds to a few hours, it can cause a range of symptoms, from blurred vision to a headache. Enough exposure leads to convulsion­s, paralysis, respirator­y failure and death.

It has the consistenc­y of motor oil and can take days or even weeks to evaporate. It could have contaminat­ed anywhere Kim was afterward, including medical facilities and the ambulance he was transporte­d in, experts say.

Airport officials and police have insisted the facility is safe. Abdul Samah, the police official, said police are tracing the suspects’ steps to ensure public safety.

 ??  ?? HIT SQUAD: Siti Aisyah, 25, thought attack was a prank.
HIT SQUAD: Siti Aisyah, 25, thought attack was a prank.

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