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North Korea blasts Malaysia for Kim Jong Nam's assassination

This article is more than 12 months old

North's state-run media accuses 
Malaysia of conspiring with South Korea

SEOUL: North Korea's state media broke a 10-day silence yesterday on the murder of Kim Jong Un's half-brother, launching a ferocious assault on Malaysia for "immoral" handling of the case and for playing politics with the corpse.

In its first comments on the airport assassination of Mr Kim Jong Nam, KCNA said Malaysia bore responsibility for the death and accused it of conspiring with South Korea.

"Malaysia is obliged to hand his body to the DPRK (North Korea) side, as it made an autopsy and forensic examination of it in an illegal and immoral manner," the North's Korean Jurists Committee said, in comments carried by the state-run news agency.

Malaysia has not released the body "under the absurd pretext" that it needs a DNA sample from the dead man's family, it said in a lengthy statement that never identified the victim.

"This proves that the Malaysian side is going to politicise the transfer of the body in utter disregard of international law and morality and thus attain a sinister purpose," it said.

Malaysia arrested four people - a North Korean man, a Malaysian, who was later released, and women from Indonesia and Vietnam - over the Feb 13 attack on Mr Kim at Kuala Lumpur International Airport as he waited for a flight to Macau.

Leaked CCTV footage shows Mr Kim being approached by two women who appear to put something in his face. Moments later, he is seen asking for help from airport staff, who direct him to a clinic.

Malaysian police said he suffered a seizure and died before he reached hospital.

The biggest responsibility for his death rests with the government of Malaysia as the citizen of the DPRK died in its land.
KCNA

An autopsy has ruled out heart failure, with investigators focusing on the theory that a toxin was applied to his face, in what South Korea has insisted was a targeted assassination.

Seoul's Foreign Minister Yun Byung Se said on Wednesday in London that the killing was a chance for the international community "to take a series of steps" against the North.

Mr Yun said the assassination by the North, if confirmed, would constitute a "serious breach" of international order.

"If North Korea is confirmed to have been behind the killing, the international community would view this as a state-led act of terrorism that infringes upon Malaysia's sovereignty," Mr Yun was quoted as saying by Yonhap news agency.

Malaysian police say they want to talk to a total of eight North Koreans, although they think several may have fled to Pyongyang immediately after the killing.

The wanted men, include a diplomat from the North Korean embassy to Kuala Lumpur, as well as an airline employee.

The North's statement, issued in both English and Korean, repeated Pyongyang's demand for a joint investigation, stressing it was ready to dispatch a delegation. It said Malaysia had initially claimed the death was from heart failure and blamed the poisoning theory on "wild rumours" from South Korean media.

"The biggest responsibility for his death rests with the government of Malaysia as the citizen of the DPRK died in its land," KCNA said.

"The unfriendly attitude of the Malaysian side found a more striking manifestation in the matter of transferring his body to the DPRK side. The DPRK... Will watch the future attitude of the Malaysian side." - AFP

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