The Daily Telegraph

North Korea’s playboy rebel ‘assassinat­ed’ by two women

- By James Rothwell, Arthur Lim in Kuala Lumpur and Julian Ryall in Tokyo

IT HAS all the ingredient­s of an outlandish spy thriller: a secretive dictator, his playboy half-brother, and a supposed pair of female assassins.

At the centre of the plot is Kim Jongnam, the older half-brother of Kim Jong-un, North Korea’s leader.

Last night the 46-year-old playboy was believed to have been murdered on the orders of his younger half-brother, who is said to live in fear of being overthrown by his family members.

Kim Jong-nam, who has frequently spoken out publicly against his family’s dynastic control of the isolated state, was waiting to board a plane at Kuala Lumpur airport in Malaysia on Monday morning when his killers struck.

He complained to staff at the airport that his face had been sprayed while he was in the shopping concourse before boarding a flight to take him to Macau.

He was in “extreme pain”, Abdul Samah Mat, the police chief of Malaysia’s Selangor state told The Daily Telegraph. “Kim Jong-nam told staff that his face was feeling extremely painful because of an unidentifi­ed liquid sprayed at him. He was then taken for treatment at KLIA [Kuala Lumpur internatio­nal airport] clinic.

“We will look through the CCTV to find if there’s any suspicious persons in the airport.”

Earlier reports in South Korea media claimed Kim Jong-nam died after being jabbed with a poisoned needle by two female spies at the airport.

Shortly after he was attacked, Kim Jong-nam collapsed and was taken to a local hospital where he died.

A passport found on his body identified him as “Kim Chol”, according to Malaysian police. Kim Jong-nam is known to have used forged passports to travel abroad in the past.

Mohmad Salleh, the Malaysian CID director, said: “He was taken to KLIA clinic for further treatment, but because of the condition he was in, he was rushed to Putrajaya hospital, but passed away soon after arriving.

“Police have classified the death of Kim Jong-nam as sudden death and are waiting for the full postmortem report to decide further action.”

Kim Jong-nam was once considered the heir apparent to Kim Jong-il, but fell out of favour in 2001 after being arrested at Tokyo’s Narita airport after trying to enter Japan on a forged Dominican Republic passport.

He told police that he had wanted to visit Disneyland with his family.

Exiled by his father, he lived in Macau, China, until Kim Jong-il died in late 2011. He subsequent­ly went into hiding, apparently out of fear that his half-brother saw him as a threat to the legitimacy of his own regime.

If it is confirmed that Kim Jong-nam was assassinat­ed at the behest of Kim Jong-un, it will not have been the first attempt on his life.

North Korean spies allegedly attempted to kill Kim Jong-nam in Macau in 2011. A bloody shootout with his bodyguards reportedly ensued, but he managed to escape alive.

Nor would it be the first time North Korea’s supreme leader has ordered the execution of one of his own family members.

In 2013, he ordered the killing of Jang Song-thaek, his uncle and mentor. Subsequent reports that he had allegedly been fed to a “pack of hungry dogs” were later discredite­d. Kim Jongnam said in an interview in 2010 that he had no ambitions of seizing power from his half-brother.

“Personally I am against third-generation succession,” he told Japan’s Asahi TV. “I hope my younger brother will do his best for the sake of North Koreans’ prosperous lives.”

He was known to be an advocate of reform in the North, which may have angered Kim Jong-un.

“Kim Jong-un and his aides are mur- derous commanders, and many times the agents of the reconnaiss­ance staff of Kim Jong-un have made attempts of poisoning Kim Jong-nam,” Jihyun Park, a North Korean defector based in Manchester, told The Daily Telegraph.

“The fate of Kim Jong-un, his aides, and those who obey North Korean dictators, will disappear on the day Pyongyang’s regime collapses,” added Ms Park, who fled the dictatorsh­ip in 1998 and now works as a human rights activist.

On Sunday the regime announced it had carried out is latest nuclear missile test, using a new type of inter-ballistic missile. North Korea’s ambassador to the UK has been summoned to the Foreign Office and warned about the country’s “provocativ­e actions” following the ballistic missile test.

Choe Il was called in and told that North Korea’s actions “threaten internatio­nal peace and security”, a Foreign Office spokesman said. The ambassador was told to convey the message to the government in Pyongyang in “the strongest possible terms” following the missile launch.

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 ??  ?? Kim Jong-nam, right, is believed to have been murdered on the orders of his younger halfbrothe­r, Kim Jong-un. Left, Kim Jong-nam with his father Kim Jong-il
Kim Jong-nam, right, is believed to have been murdered on the orders of his younger halfbrothe­r, Kim Jong-un. Left, Kim Jong-nam with his father Kim Jong-il

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