Documentary
'Assassins' tells the strange story of the
murder of Kim Jong Un's half-brother
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[January 29, 2021]
By Hanna Rantala and Jonathan Oatis
(Reuters) - Nearly
four years after the assassination of North
Korean leader Kim Jong Un's estranged
half-brother, Kim Jong Nam, a new documentary
seeks to shed light on the brazen airport murder
and the involvement of the two young women
accused of carrying it out. |
Kim Jong Nam's killing
https://www.reuters.com/
article/us-northkorea-malaysia-kim-murder/murder-at-the-airport-the-brazen-attack-on-kim-jong-nam-idUSKCN1RD185
at Malaysia's Kuala Lumpur International Airport
in February 2017 was caught on grainy CCTV
footage broadcast worldwide, yet many details
still remain a mystery. (https://reut.rs/2KWDB8f)
U.S. director Ryan White spent 2-1/2 years
investigating the case for "Assassins," which
will be released in cinemas and digitally on
demand on Friday.
The film focuses on the two women - Indonesian
Siti Aisyah and Vietnamese Doan Thi Huong - who
were charged with poisoning Kim by smearing his
face with the banned chemical weapon VX and had
at one point faced a mandatory death penalty in
Malaysia.
Defense lawyers maintained they were pawns in an
assassination orchestrated by North Korean
agents. The women said they thought they were
part of a reality prank show and did not know
they were poisoning Kim.
Siti was freed in March 2019 after a Malaysian
court dropped charges against her. Prosecutors
dropped a murder charge against Huong, who
pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of causing
harm using dangerous means, and she went free
the following May.
South Korean and U.S. officials have said the
North Korean regime had ordered the
assassination of Kim, who had criticized his
family's dynastic rule. Pyongyang has denied the
allegation.
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For "Assassins," White's
extensive research included travel to Vietnam,
Indonesia and Malaysia. But he said hearing from
the women themselves was the most crucial factor
in finding the reality behind the headlines.
Doan and Aisyah were shown the documentary
earlier this week, and while the film got their
blessing, Doan expressed regret over some
scenes, White said.
"Her first reaction ... was, 'I wish I hadn't
smiled so much,'" he said, referring to scenes
showing the return to Vietnam of Doan, who White
said became a target for vitriol on social media
and has "retreated into her shell a lot more."
"They're both lovely and thankfully survived
this experience, but I think their lives will
never be the same, unfortunately," he said.
(Reporting by Hanna Ratala; Writing by Jonathan
Oatis; Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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