Exclusive: Malaysia mistook slain Kim
Jong Nam for South Korean
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[March 30, 2017]
By Tom Allard, Emily Chow and James Pearson
KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Malaysian
authorities wrongly identified the slain half-brother of North Korea's
leader as a South Korean national and first alerted Seoul's embassy in
Kuala Lumpur soon after his death, sources familiar with the incident
told Reuters.
The police error did have a silver lining: It enabled Seoul to quickly
inform Kuala Lumpur the dead man was probably Kim Jong Nam, half-brother
to North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.
Kim was murdered around mid-morning on Feb. 13, when Malaysian police
say two women smeared super toxic VX nerve agent on his face at the
budget terminal of Kuala Lumpur International Airport.
After examining the victim's passport, Malaysian authorities confused
the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea, the formal name of North
Korea, with the Republic of Korea, the official name of its estranged
southern neighbor, the sources said.
Malaysian authorities contacted the South Korean embassy, sending along
copies of documents found on Kim’s body. After the mix-up was realized,
North Korea’s diplomatic mission in Kuala Lumpur was informed on the day
of the murder, the sources said.
Malaysian police did not respond to requests for comment.
The confusion over Kim’s nationality also explains why it was the South
Korean media that initially broke the news. Within 24 hours of his
death, South Korea’s National Intelligence Service had briefed lawmakers
in Seoul that Kim Jong Nam was believed dead. It then was leaked to the
South Korean media.
Hours after the news emerged in South Korea, Malaysian police confirmed
that a North Korean man had died at the airport, without disclosing his
identity.
OUT IN THE OPEN
South Korean and U.S. intelligence sources say North Korea masterminded
the attack, which Pyongyang denies.
North Korea does not even acknowledge the dead man is Kim Jong Nam.
Pyongyang continues to refer to him as Kim Chol, the name on the
diplomatic passport Kim was carrying when he died.
The world might never have known the slain man to be Kim Jong Nam if
Malaysian police had sent a copy of his passport to the North Korean
embassy, not the South Korean one. South Korean intelligence officers
say Kim Jong Un had issued standing orders for the elimination of his
elder half-brother.
Kim Jong Nam’s murder was remarkably public, according to North Korea
analysts. The assassins chose an airport covered by CCTV cameras and a
designated weapon of mass destruction possessed by only a few states,
North Korea among them.
“The effect had to be planned,” said Robert L. Gallucci, a former U.S.
chief negotiator with North Korea over its nuclear program. “They wanted
to underline impunity, that they can act with impunity.”
The brazen nature of the assassination also made collecting evidence
relatively easy. After the first chaotic day, the investigation was
taken over by Malaysia’s Special Branch - which combines the roles of
elite police unit and domestic intelligence agency.
The two women who smeared the VX nerve agent on Kim - described by
police as Vietnamese “entertainment outlet employee” Doan Thi Huong and
Indonesian “spa masseuse” Siti Aisyah - were arrested three days after
the killing.
According to lawyers, families and consular officials, the two women
believed they were involved in a prank.
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Kim Jong Nam at Beijing airport in 2007. Kyodo/via REUTERS
CCTV AIRPORT FOOTAGE
Three days after the women's detention, four North Koreans were
named as ringleaders of the plot, all of whom left Malaysia soon
after the murder.
Captured by CCTV footage at the airport, the men - later identified
by South Korea as agents of Pyongyang’s ministry of state security -
were nearby when Kim was poisoned.
While South Korea and Malaysia were caught unawares by Kim’s trip to
Malaysia, the alleged state security agents at the airport suggests
North Korea was well informed.
Three of the four arrived in Malaysia before Kim did. The other one
landed a day later, on February 7, police have said.
Malaysian police believe the women were recruited by another North
Korean national Ri Ji U, also known as James.
Two other North Koreans, Hyon Kwang Song, second secretary at the
Kuala Lumpur embassy, and Kim Uk Il, a staff member of North Korea’s
state airline Air Koryo, were also named as suspects.
Ri, Hyon and Kim are believed to be holed up in the North Korean
embassy, where Malaysian police are prevented from entering without
permission under the Vienna Convention that lays out the
international rules of diplomacy.
Another “important” but unnamed North Korean national is also being
sought, Malaysian police inspector-general Khalid Abu Bakar said
last week.
North Korea and Malaysia's historically close ties began to unravel
in the wake of Kim's death, hitting a nadir when Pyongyang banned
nine Malaysian citizens from leaving the country in retaliation for
the Kim investigation.
Malaysia's Prime Minister Najib Razak initially announced a
tit-for-tat ban, accusing North Korea of “effectively holding our
citizens hostage”. A day later, he struck a more conciliatory tone,
saying the dispute would be solved through quiet negotiations.
Those talks have yet to conclude. North Korea is demanding Kim’s
body and the three remaining suspects inside its embassy be returned
to Pyongyang in exchange for an end to the travel ban on Malaysians,
a diplomatic source said.
(This story has been refiled to clarify paragraph 11)
(Reporting by Tom Allard, Emily Chow and James Pearson. Writing by
Tom Allard. Editing by Bill Tarrant.)
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