Yahoo – AFP,
Frederick ATTEWILL, 25 February 2017
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| People watch a television showing news reports of Kim Jong-Nam, the half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un in Seoul on February 14, 2017 |
Two women
being held over the assassination of Kim Jong-Nam said Saturday they thought
they were taking part in a prank video, with one of them reportedly telling a
senior diplomat she was paid just RM400 ($90) for her role.
Almost two
weeks after the half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un was killed with
a lethal nerve agent at Kuala Lumpur airport, Malaysian teams in hazmat suits
sealed off the scene of the assassination early Sunday to sweep the site for
toxins.
Two women
are seen shoving something into Kim's face in leaked CCTV footage from the
airport. He later suffered a seizure and was dead before he reached hospital.
Malaysia
revealed Friday the 45-year-old was assassinated with a lethal nerve agent
manufactured for chemical warfare and listed by the UN as a weapon of mass
destruction.
Indonesian
Siti Aisyah, who was arrested soon after the assassination on February 13, said
she believed she was handling a liquid like "baby oil", the country's
deputy ambassador to Malaysia Andreano Erwin said according to reports.
Siti, 25,
"only said in general that somebody asked her to do this activity",
according to Erwin, who was granted access to Siti in Kuala Lumpur Saturday.
Another
female suspect, Vietnamese Doan Thi Huong, 28, is also in custody over the
murder, but Erwin said Siti had told Indonesian consular staff she did not know
her.
Huong told
Vietnam's foreign ministry that she believed she had been tricked into killing
Kim and thought she was taking part in a prank for a comedy video.
"During
contact with embassy staff, Huong said she... had thought she was playing a
role in a humorous video clip," a statement from Vietnam's foreign
ministry said.
Huong
gained notoriety after Malaysian police shared CCTV images of her wearing a top
emblazoned with "LOL" shortly after the killing.
Malaysian
police have said one of the women arrested after the attack fell ill in
custody, adding she had been vomiting.
However,
Erwin said Siti was physically healthy while Vietnam said Huong was "in
stable health".
'Blatant
violation'
The news
Friday that lethal VX nerve agent was used in the attack brought condemnation
from South Korea, which has pointed the finger at the North over Kim's death.
Seoul
slammed the use of the toxin as a "blatant violation of the Chemical
Weapons Convention and other international norms".
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Nerve agent VX
|
The fallout
from the attack continued after US media reported unofficial talks in New York
between North Korean and former American officials had been cancelled.
Malaysian
teams equipped with gas masks and specialised detection machinery descended on
Kuala Lumpur airport's terminal two early Sunday, accompanied by forensic
experts and officials from the Atomic Energy Licensing Board.
Large
sections of the departures hall were cordoned off with police tape in
preparation for the hour-long sweep for traces of the highly potent toxin.
Malaysian
police had said they would do everything possible to ensure there was no risk
to the public from the nerve agent.
National
police chief Khalid Abu Bakar said Friday experts would sweep the site where
the attack took place as well as other locations the female suspects visited.
Detectives
are also holding a North Korean man but want to speak to seven other North
Koreans, four of whom are thought to have fled to Pyongyang.
One man wanted
for questioning, who is believed to still be in Malaysia, is senior North
Korean embassy official Hyon Kwang Song, who enjoys diplomatic immunity.
![]() |
Members of
Malaysia's Hazmat team conduct a decontamination operation at
the departures
terminal of the Kuala Lumpur International Airport 2 (KLIA 2) in
Sepang on
February 25, 2017
|
However,
state police chief Abdul Samah Mat insisted under Malaysian law "we have
the right to call anybody for statements for our investigations".
He added if
wanted people do not co-operate, police would issue a notice
"compelling" them to come forward.
Abdul Samah
also told reporters an investigation in connection to the murder was ongoing at
an apartment complex in Kuala Lumpur but declined to comment on local media
reports chemicals has been seized from the address.
No
next-of-kin have yet come forward to formally identify the body of the
45-year-old victim or provide a DNA sample, but Abdul Samah said authorities
would give relatives a "reasonable" amount of time to do so.




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