Malaysia further downgrading ties with
North Korea a year after airport assassination: sources
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[February 13, 2018]
By Rozanna Latiff and A. Ananthalakshmi
KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - One year after
North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's half-brother was assassinated at Kuala
Lumpur's airport, Malaysia is further downgrading once-close ties with
Pyongyang, sources familiar with the government's plans said.
Kim Jong Nam was assassinated on Feb. 13, 2017 when two women smeared
his face with VX nerve agent - which the U.N. lists as a weapon of mass
destruction. The women claim they were tricked into believing they were
part of a reality show, but U.S. and South Korea say the murder was
orchestrated by Pyongyang.
The brazen killing came as North Korea was starting to accelerate its
missile tests and countries around the world came under mounting
pressure to enforce ever-tightening U.N. sanctions against Pyongyang.
The repercussions from the killing are still being felt.
Malaysia is considering reducing the staff size of the North Korean
mission in Kuala Lumpur to four by not renewing requests to replace
diplomats when their terms end, according to a diplomatic source and an
advisor to the government. Both declined to be named due to the
sensitivity of the matter.
Malaysia is also turning down invitations to participate in North Korean
events. A diplomatic source with direct knowledge of the situation said
Malaysia declined an invitation to send an envoy to attend last week's
military parade in Pyongyang.
"It's just too dangerous," the source told Reuters, referring to the
Malaysian diplomats North Korea stopped from leaving the country last
year.
The Malaysian foreign ministry declined to comment.
Meanwhile, trade and business ties have all but dried up.
A Malaysian businessman, who until recently imported coal from North
Korea, said he stopped buying from Pyongyang - even before U.N.
sanctions that banned all trade of North Korean coal - because the
purchases were drawing a lot of attention after the Kim Jong Nam
killing.
TRAVEL BAN
Ties quickly deteriorated after North Korea's ambassador to Malaysia
questioned the credibility of the police investigation into the
assassination, insisting Kim Jong Nam was an ordinary citizen who had
died of a heart attack.
Malaysia recalled its ambassador to North Korea, banned its citizens
from traveling to the North and canceled visa-free entry for North
Koreans.
North Korea retaliated with a travel ban on all Malaysians in Pyongyang,
trapping three diplomats and six family members. They were able to fly
out only after Malaysia agreed to hand over Kim Jong Nam's corpse and
send three North Koreans wanted for questioning back to North Korea.
Pressure from the United States has been mounting on Malaysia and other
Southeast Asian countries to cut trade and diplomatic ties with
Pyongyang, as President Donald Trump seeks support for tougher action
against nuclear-armed North Korea.
Malaysia said last year it was considering permanently closing its
embassy in Pyongyang and moving North Korea services to its Beijing
mission. It has not been staffed since last April after its diplomats
were allowed to leave under the swap agreement.
The cabinet has yet to make a decision on closing the embassy.
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Indonesian Siti Aisyah, who is on trial for the killing of Kim Jong
Nam, the estranged half-brother of North Korea's leader, is escorted
as she arrives at the Shah Alam High Court on the outskirts of Kuala
Lumpur, Malaysia January 22, 2018. REUTERS/Lai Seng Sin
"There's no turning back the clock on relations with North Korea, not
after the Kim Jong Nam incident and the near impossibility of having any
positive relationship with the country under such severe sanctions,"
said Shahriman Lockman, a senior analyst with the Institute of Strategic
and International Studies.
"I think the sense is that North Korea took advantage of Malaysia's
goodwill and relative openness," he said.
TRADE HALTED
North Korea benefited from its Malaysian ties -- Pyongyang exported
everything from coal and medical devices to crabs, cloth hangers and
fire extinguishers to Malaysia. Imports, however, came to a grinding
halt last year.
Malaysia was also host to hundreds of North Korean workers, who were
sent back after the airport killing.
A Reuters report showed how North Korea's spy agency, the Reconnaissance
Bureau, was running an arms operation out of Kuala Lumpur.
The frayed ties have affected Malaysian businesses that used to trade
with the isolated country.
"We have been doing business with North Korea for 10 years," said the
Malaysian coal trader who declined to be identified.
"Suddenly it became a big issue because of the murder," said the trader,
adding he was questioned by the police and the foreign ministry over a
March purchase.
It's a sharp contrast from 10 years ago when it was easy for Malaysian
businessmen to engage with Pyongyang, he said.
"I met the (North Korean) trade attaché and he arranged a shipment for
me. That's how I started," he said.
The rocky relationship also remains in the spotlight with the continuing
trial of the two women, Indonesian Siti Aisyah and Doan Thi Huong from
Vietnam, in a Kuala Lumpur court on charges of murdering Kim Jong Nam.
The prosecution has built its case on airport video recordings of the
killing and VX residue found on the women.
Defense lawyers say the prosecution has not put forward a motive for the
killing and argue the two women were merely unwitting pawns in the
attack.
The prosecution is not expected to finish presenting evidence until next
month.
The women face the death penalty if convicted.
(Reporting by Rozanna Latiff and A. Ananthalakshmi; Editing by Bill
Tarrant)
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