Lodi News-Sentinel

Woman arrested in death of North Korean leader’s half brother

- By Jonathan Kaiman

BEIJING — Questions mounted Wednesday about the mysterious death of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s half brother at a Malaysian airport, as police revealed that they had detained one woman, a Vietnamese passport holder, in connection with the case.

Kim Jong Nam was waiting in the departure area of the Kuala Lumpur airport on Monday morning when two women approached him from behind. One of the women covered his face with a cloth, according to Malaysian police. He complained to airport staff that he felt dizzy, then died en route to a hospital.

The 46-year-old Kim was once considered a potential successor to his father, Kim Jong Il, and South Korean officials quickly accused Pyongyang of ordering his assassinat­ion. Yet details about the killing’s circumstan­ces and motivation­s remain hazy.

Security video from the airport, carried widely by Malaysian news websites, showed a woman believed to be the suspect waiting for a taxi at the airport. She wore pink tights and a white sweater, the letters “LOL” emblazoned across its front.

“Suspect was positively identified from the CCTV footage at the airport and was alone at the time of arrest,” said a statement by Tan Sri Noor Rashid Ibrahim, Malaysia’s deputy inspector general of police.

Another Malaysian police official, Fadzil Ahmat, told the Malaysian media outlet Bernama that a woman had “covered (Kim’s) face with a cloth laced with a liquid,” and that Kim’s eyes “suffered burns as a result of the liquid.”

Earlier reports had said the woman used a poison needle, but that is apparently no longer believed to be true.

South Korean intelligen­ce officials were quick to point a finger at Pyongyang, which has a long history of using assassinat­ion to rid itself of those deemed to threaten the regime.

The assassinat­ion was a “standing order” dating back to 2012, Lee Cheolwoo, chairman of the intelligen­ce committee in South Korea’s parliament, told reporters on Wednesday.

“We should take this as an action that reflects Jong Un’s paranoia,” Lee added, according to Bloomberg. “Normal citizens in the North aren’t aware of Jong Nam’s existence, and it is only elite there who knows about him. The elite should have been shocked.”

Kim Jong Nam was traveling alone on Monday, preparing to return to the Chinese region Macau, where he had been living incognito for more than a decade. He was carrying a passport bearing the name Kim Chol.

He is believed to have been the eldest of Kim Jong Il’s children. His mother was the elder Kim’s mistress, actress Song Hye Rim.

Kim Jong Nam was caught attempting to enter Japan on falsified documents in 2001. He told Japanese authoritie­s that he was trying to take his 4-year-old son to Tokyo Disneyland.

Kim, whose substantia­l paunch and perennial stubble lent him an air of cavalier dishevelme­nt, occasional­ly spoke out against his family’s rule — and spoke favorably of openness and globalism — in interviews with Japanese media.

His son, Kim Han Sol, is now 21, and his whereabout­s and safety are unclear. Kim Han Sol has also expressed hope for reform in Pyongyang.

“I have always dreamed one day I will go back and make things better, make it easier for all the people there,” he said in a 2012 interview with the Finnish broadcaste­r YLE.

Analysts were divided over the killing’s significan­ce for the North Korean regime.

“One of the reasons I’m scratching my head now is that the (South Korean) intelligen­ce director, he didn’t give any explanatio­n of the ‘why now’ question,” said John Delury, a professor at Yonsei University in Seoul. “This is kind of out of the blue, for people watching North Korea. I don’t know anyone out there who was saying, ‘Oh, Kim Jong Nam’s days are numbered.’ There’s no obvious explanatio­n for the timing.”

Daniel Pinkston, a North Korea expert and professor of internatio­nal relations at Troy University, said that if Kim Jong Un perceived his half brother as a political threat, he may very well have ordered an assassinat­ion. In 2013, he oversaw the execution of his uncle and regent, Jang Song Taek.

“For autocracie­s and dictators, that’s a prudent move, to stay in power — to eliminate any possible sources of challenger­s,” he said. “To be a prudent dictator, you have to be willing to use deadly force.”

He added that Pyongyang’s role in Kim Jong Nam’s killing remains uncertain.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States