El Dorado News-Times

N. Koreans told to leave Malaysia as spat heats up

- HYUNG-JIN KIM AND EILEEN NG Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Kim Tong-hyung of The Associated Press.

KUALA LUMPUR, Malaysia — Malaysia said Friday that it will order all North Korean diplomats to leave the country within 48 hours, an escalation of diplomat brawl over Malaysia’s move to extradite a North Korean suspect to the United States to face money-laundering charges.

Malaysia’s announceme­nt was made hours after North Korea said it was terminatin­g diplomatic ties with Malaysia because it committed a “super-large hostile act … in subservien­ce to the U.S. pressure.” North Korea called the money-laundering charges an “absurd fabricatio­n and [a] sheer plot” orchestrat­ed by the United States and warned Washington will “pay a due price.”

It’s the latest developmen­t in growing animosity between Washington and Pyongyang, as the North ramps up pressure on the Biden administra­tion over a nuclear standoff. Ties between North Korea and Malaysia have been virtually frozen since the slaying in 2017 of the estranged half brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un at Kuala Lumpur Internatio­nal Airport.

Malaysia’s Foreign Ministry denounced North Korea’s move as “unfriendly and unconstruc­tive.” It said the government will order all diplomatic staff members and their dependents at the North Korea Embassy to leave Malaysia within 48 hours.

It added that Malaysia also was compelled by North Korea’s decision to shut its own embassy in Pyongyang. Foreign Minister Hishammudd­in Hussein tweeted that all Malaysian diplomats in North Korea had returned after the embassy’s operations were suspended in 2017.

The ministry said Malaysia had sought to strengthen ties with North Korea “even after the deplorable assassinat­ion of Kim Jong Nam in 2017” and that Pyongyang’s decision was “clearly unwarrante­d, disproport­ionate and certainly disruptive” for regional peace and stability.

Malaysia’s Foreign Ministry website said the North Korean Embassy is led by Kim Yu Song, the charge d’affaires and councilor, and six other staff.

“Yes, we will be shutting down. We are now discussing the plans with our staff here and liaising with our government,” Kim was quoted as saying by the New Straits Times.

North Korea has long used Malaysia as a crucial economic hub where it handled trade, labor exports and some illicit businesses in Southeast Asia. Experts say North Korea is taking a tough stance over the extraditio­n because it sees it as a pressure tactic against the North.

“North Korea is taking a hard line because it thinks it must not back down [over the extraditio­n] as it’ll then have a war of nerves with the Biden government in the next four years,” said Nam Sung-wook, a professor at South Korea’s Korea University.

Nam said North Korea also likely worries that similar cases involving North Korean citizens could occur in other Southeast Asian countries.

Threatenin­g to cut ties with Malaysia was one of the North’s strongest options to express its anger with the Biden administra­tion without jeopardizi­ng an eventual return to nuclear negotiatio­ns with Washington, said Hong Min, a senior analyst at Seoul’s Korea Institute for National Unificatio­n.

North Korea has insisted it won’t engage in talks with Washington unless it abandons what Pyongyang’s perceives as a “hostile” policy. But experts say North Korea will eventually seek to return to diplomacy to find ways to get sanctions relief and revive its moribund economy.

Earlier this month, Malaysia’s top court ruled North Korean Mun Chol Myong could be extradited, rejecting his assertion the U.S. charge was politicall­y motivated. Mun had lived in Malaysia for a decade and was arrested in May 2019 after U.S. authoritie­s requested his extraditio­n.

In his affidavit, Mun denied U.S. accusation­s that he was involved in supplying luxury goods from Singapore to North Korea in violation of U.N. sanctions. He denied that he had laundered funds through front companies and that he issued fraudulent documents to support illicit shipments to his country.

After that ruling, Mun’s family hired a lawyer to challenge the legality of the extraditio­n. Lawyer Emile Ezra said the new legal bid centered on Mun’s right to a fair hearing and also an injunction to stop his extraditio­n.

A Malaysian foreign ministry official said Mun was extradited to the U.S. on Wednesday. The ministry statement said it was carried out only after all legal process has been exhausted.

 ?? (AP/Vincent Thian) ?? Police patrol Friday outside the North Korean Embassy in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Embassy employees have been given 48 hours to leave the country.
(AP/Vincent Thian) Police patrol Friday outside the North Korean Embassy in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Embassy employees have been given 48 hours to leave the country.

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