Chattanooga Times Free Press

Pair charged with murder in nerve agent attack

- BY EILEEN NG

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Their eyes red and heads bowed, two young women accused of smearing VX nerve agent on the estranged half brother of North Korea’s leader were charged with murder Wednesday in a Malaysian court.

The women, who arrived in court protected by masked special forces carrying machine guns, are at the center of the bizarre killing of Kim Jong Nam at a busy Kuala Lumpur airport terminal. Many speculate the attack was orchestrat­ed by North Korea, but it has denied any role.

“I understand but I am not guilty,” Vietnamese suspect Doan Thi Huong told the court in English after the murder charge was read. She looked briefly at the public gallery, her eyes red and face puffy, as she was led out.

The other suspect, Indonesian Siti Aisyah, nodded as her translator told her, “You are accused of murdering a North Korean man at the departure hall” of Kuala Lumpur Internatio­nal Airport. She was dressed in a red T-shirt and jeans.

The women did not enter pleas because the magistrate court where they appeared has no jurisdicti­on over a murder case. Lead prosecutor Iskander Ahmad told the court he will ask for the case to be transferre­d to a higher court and for the women to be tried together.

Each faces a mandatory death sentence if convicted. Both women were wearing bulletproo­f vests as they were escorted from the court to Kajang Prison.

Kim Jong Nam was attacked at the airport as he waited for his flight home to Macau on Feb. 13. He died

shortly after two women went up behind him and wiped something onto his face.

Both women have reportedly said they thought they were part of a prank TV show playing harmless tricks on unsuspecti­ng people. Aisyah told authoritie­s she was paid the equivalent of $90.

The attack was caught on grainy airport surveillan­ce video; Huong was seen clearly in a T-shirt with “LOL” emblazoned across the front. Both women were originally from modest farming villages and had moved to their countries’ capitals seeking a better life.

Gooi Soon Seng, Aisyah’s lawyer, spoke to his client for the first time Wednesday.

“Her eyes were red and she says she’s innocent,” he said.

Also Wednesday, the court approved a gag order to prevent police and potential witnesses from making public statements about the case.

Kim’s corpse is at the center of a growing diplomatic battle between North Korea and Malaysia.

North Korea is widely speculated to have been behind the killing, particular­ly after Malaysia said Friday that VX had killed Kim. Experts say the oily poison was almost certainly produced in a sophistica­ted state weapons laboratory.

North Korea’s official news agency called that finding the “height of absurdity” on Wednesday, saying

the two women could not have used such a deadly toxin without killing or sickening themselves and anyone around them.

On Tuesday, a high-level North Korean delegation arrived in Kuala Lumpur seeking custody of the body.

North Korea opposed Malaysian officials even conducting an autopsy, while Malaysia has resisted giving up the body without getting DNA samples and confirmati­on from next of kin.

Malaysian officials have confirmed the victim of the attack was Kim Jong Nam. North Korea, however, has identified him only as a North Korean national with a diplomatic passport bearing the name Kim Chol.

Health Minister Subramania­m Sathasivam said Malaysia will continue to insist the body be identified by medical examiners through DNA or other means before it can be released. He said the protocol is to release it to the next-of-kin once identifica­tion is completed.

 ??  ?? Vietnamese murder suspect Doan Thi Huong, center, is escorted by police officers from court in Sepang, Malaysia, on Wednesday.
Vietnamese murder suspect Doan Thi Huong, center, is escorted by police officers from court in Sepang, Malaysia, on Wednesday.

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