Just in:
World Football Federation Secures Sponsorship From Saudi Oil Giant // Lee Chong Wei Shows Up On Chinese Hot cultural Talk Show “SHEDE Wisdom Talents”, Talking About “Crossing The Hill” // Liverpool FC continues international growth with first official retail partnership in South Korea // ByteDance Eyes US Shutdown for TikTok // Emirates to Embrace Electric Seaglider Travel // UAE President, Spanish Prime Minister Hold Phone Talks // Forward Fashion’s Artelli Presents: Nobuyoshi Araki’s “Paradise” Starting from April 27th, at K11 MUSEA // Etihad Airways Announces Paris Service with A380 // World Intellectual Property Day: OPPO Maintains Top 10 Global IP Ranking for Fifth Consecutive Year // Downpours in Oman and UAE Likely Amplified by Warming Planet // GE Jun, Chairman and CEO of TOJOY, Delivers an Inspiring Speech: “Leaping Ahead Again” // PolyU forms global partnership with ZEISS Vision Care to expand impact and accelerate market penetration of patented myopia control technology // AVPN Charts Path Forward at 2024 Global Conference // Supreme Court dismisses pleas for 100% VVPAT verification // Andertoons by Mark Anderson for Fri, 26 Apr 2024 // Dubai Gears Up for Second FinTech Summit as Funding Surges // Andertoons by Mark Anderson for Thu, 25 Apr 2024 // CapBridge Shares Insights on the Recent Launch of Digital Asset ETFs in Hong Kong // Crypto Market Poised for Boom as Baby Boomers Embrace Bitcoin ETFs // Ministry of Agriculture Supports Taiwanese Tea’s Entry into Singapore Market to Boost Global Presence //

North Korea bars Malaysians from leaving as murder row boils

By Rozanna Latiff and Ju-min Park
| KUALA LUMPUR/SEOUL

ADVERTISEMENT

KUALA LUMPUR/SEOUL North Korea barred Malaysians from leaving the country on Tuesday, sparking tit-for-tat action by Malaysia, as police investigating the murder of Kim Jong Nam in Kuala Lumpur sought to question three men hiding in the North Korean embassy.

Malaysia’s Prime Minister Najib Razak accused North Korea of “effectively holding our citizens hostage” and scheduled an emergency meeting of his National Security Council later on Tuesday.

The moves underscored the dramatic deterioration in ties with one of North Korea’s few friends outside China since the murder of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s estranged half-brother at Kuala Lumpur International Airport on Feb. 13.

ADVERTISEMENT

Malaysia says the assassins used VX nerve agent, a chemical listed by the United Nations as a weapon of mass destruction.

Police have identified eight North Koreans wanted in connection with the murder, including two of the three believed to be hiding in the embassy – a senior North Korean diplomat and a state airline employee.

The only people charged so far are a Vietnamese woman and an Indonesian woman, accused of smearing the victim’s face with VX. He died within 20 minutes.

North Korea’s foreign ministry issued a temporary ban on Malaysians leaving the country, “until the incident that happened in Malaysia is properly solved,” state-run Korea Central News Agency said.

“In this period the diplomats and citizens of Malaysia may work and live normally under the same conditions and circumstances as before.”

HOSTAGE-TAKING

Najib denounced the travel ban in a statement as an “abhorrent act” that was in “total disregard of all international law and diplomatic norms”. He returned from Indonesia and called an emergency meeting of his National Security Council.

Najib said he has instructed the police “to prevent all North Korean citizens in Malaysia from leaving the country until we are assured of the safety and security of all Malaysians in North Korea”.

“You’d have to go back a long way for this kind of wholesale diplomatic meltdown,” said Euan Graham Director, International Security at the Lowy Institute in Sydney.

Graham called it “a classic own goal of North Korea’s making”, and was triggered “by the most outrageous public murder than you can image, using a chemical weapon in a crowded international airport.”

The Malaysian murder and the four ballistic missiles North Korea test-launched on Monday “creates a more supportive climate for even tougher rounds of sanctions and coercive measures” against Pyongyang, Graham said.

Before the murder, North Korea could count Malaysia as one of its strongest friends. But Malaysia has since stopped visa-free travel and on Monday it expelled North Korea’s ambassador for questioning the impartiality of the murder investigation.

Last week, Malaysia said it would investigate North Korea front companies after a Reuters report showed that Pyongyang’s spy agency was running an arms network in the country.

NO RAID

There are 11 Malaysians in North Korea, according to a Malaysian foreign ministry official, including three embassy staff, six family members, and two others.

Hundreds of North Koreans are believed to be in Malaysia, most of them students and workers. The focus, however, was on its embassy staff.

“We are trying to physically identify all the embassy staff who are here,” deputy home minister Nur Jazlan Mohamed told reporters outside the North Korean embassy.

He said staff would not be allowed to leave the embassy “until we are satisfied of their numbers and where they are”.

By early afternoon, Malaysian police had removed tape and a police car blocking the North Korean embassy driveway.

Speaking at a news conference in Kuala Lumpur on Tuesday, Malaysia’s police chief Khalid Abu Bakar said police would not raid the embassy building to get the three North Koreans sought in connection with the murder.

“We will wait for them to come out,” the police chief said. “We have got all the time.”

Aside from those three suspects, police have said four other wanted North Koreans left Malaysia in the hours after the murder.

The only North Korean suspect to be apprehended was deported on Friday, released due to insufficient evidence.

U.S. officials and South Korean intelligence suspect North Korean agents were behind the assassination of Kim Jong Nam, who had been living in Macau under China’s protection. He had spoken out publicly against his family’s dynastic rule of North Korea.

North Korea has refused to accept the dead man is leader Kim Jong Un’s half brother, and has suggested the victim died of a heart attack.

No next of kin have come forward to claim the body, but the Malaysian police chief said he was confident of obtaining

DNA samples to formally identify the murdered man.

(Additional reporting by A.AnanthaLakshmi and Liz Lee in KUALA LUMPUR and Jack Kim in SEOUL; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and Bill Tarrant)

-Reuters

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT
Just in:
World Intellectual Property Day: OPPO Maintains Top 10 Global IP Ranking for Fifth Consecutive Year // Abu Dhabi Unveils Online Portal to Strengthen Healthcare Workforce // Emirates to Embrace Electric Seaglider Travel // Lee Chong Wei Shows Up On Chinese Hot cultural Talk Show “SHEDE Wisdom Talents”, Talking About “Crossing The Hill” // Crypto Market Poised for Boom as Baby Boomers Embrace Bitcoin ETFs // Liverpool FC continues international growth with first official retail partnership in South Korea // PolyU forms global partnership with ZEISS Vision Care to expand impact and accelerate market penetration of patented myopia control technology // Galaxy Macau’s Sakura Cultural Festival Kicked off in Splendor // Etihad Airways Announces Paris Service with A380 // World Football Federation Secures Sponsorship From Saudi Oil Giant // NetApp’s 2024 Cloud Complexity Report Reveals AI Disrupt or Die Era Unfolding Globally // Telecom Giant Du Eyes Crypto Integration for FinTech Platform // Dubai Gears Up for Second FinTech Summit as Funding Surges // Downpours in Oman and UAE Likely Amplified by Warming Planet // UAE President, Spanish Prime Minister Hold Phone Talks // Ministry of Agriculture Supports Taiwanese Tea’s Entry into Singapore Market to Boost Global Presence // CapBridge Shares Insights on the Recent Launch of Digital Asset ETFs in Hong Kong // Forward Fashion’s Artelli Presents: Nobuyoshi Araki’s “Paradise” Starting from April 27th, at K11 MUSEA // DIFC Courts Cement Role as Top English Dispute Resolution Choice // AVPN Charts Path Forward at 2024 Global Conference //