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| Indonesian Siti Aisyah waves to the press after her return to Jakarta having been freed by a Malaysian court (AFP Photo/ADEK BERRY) |
An Indonesian woman accused of assassinating the North Korean leader's half-brother was freed Monday after Malaysian prosecutors dropped a murder charge against her, in a shock decision that delighted her friends and family.
Siti Aisyah
smiled as she was ushered into a car outside the court, where she had been on
trial for a year and a half alongside a Vietnamese woman for the 2017 murder of
Kim Jong Nam at Kuala Lumpur airport.
"I
feel happy. I did not know this will happen. I did not expect it," said
the 27-year-old, who earlier hugged her tearful Vietnamese co-accused, Doan Thi
Huong, in the dock when the news was announced.
Indonesian
officials mounted a major diplomatic effort to free Aisyah, which included
pressure from the president. The Indonesian justice minister had written to
Malaysia's attorney general seeking her release, citing problems with the case,
and he agreed last week.
The women
had always denied murder, saying they were tricked by North Korean spies into
carrying out the Cold War-style hit using VX nerve agent, and believed it was a
prank for a reality TV show.
Their lawyers presented them as scapegoats, saying that authorities were unable to catch the real killers. Four North Koreans -- formally accused of the murder alongside the women -- fled Malaysia shortly after the assassination.
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Elite
Malaysian police secure the court hearing the North Korea assassination case
(AFP Photo/Mohd RASFAN)
|
Their lawyers presented them as scapegoats, saying that authorities were unable to catch the real killers. Four North Koreans -- formally accused of the murder alongside the women -- fled Malaysia shortly after the assassination.
The trial,
which began in October 2017, had been due to resume Monday with the defence
stage of proceedings after a break of several months.
But at the
start of the hearing at Shah Alam High Court, prosecutor Muhammad Iskandar
Ahmad requested that the murder charge against Aisyah be withdrawn and she be
given a discharge, without providing a reason.
The judge
agreed to a discharge not amounting to an acquittal, and ordered Aisyah's
immediate release. This means Aisyah has not been formally cleared of the
charge and could, in theory, be re-arrested.
The news
was a surprise as the court had only been scheduled to hear Huong testify
Monday, and the Vietnamese woman was left in shock that she was not released
alongside Aisyah.
"I do
not know what will happen to me now. I am innocent -- please pray for me,"
the 30-year-old said. Her testimony was adjourned Monday as her lawyers said
they would also apply to get the charge against her dropped.
Homecoming party
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Indonesian
Siti Aisyah adjusts hear headscarf during a press conference on
her return to
Indonesia (AFP Photo/ADEK BERRY)
|
Homecoming party
Aisyah
arrived later Monday in Jakarta, where she was reunited with parents. In her
hometown of Sindangsari on Java island, there was shock and delight as word
spread of her release.
"We've
heard the news and we're so happy. We're getting a celebration ready!" her
aunt Darmi, who goes by one name, told AFP.
Indonesia
often makes concerted diplomatic efforts to free its citizens detained overseas,
particularly those who may face the death penalty.
Speaking at
the Indonesian embassy in Malaysia, Indonesian Justice Minister Yasonna Laoly
reeled off a list of figures in government -- from President Joko Widodo to the
foreign minister -- who had pushed for Aisyah's release.
A murder
conviction carries a mandatory penalty of death by hanging in Malaysia. The
government vowed last year to abolish capital punishment but has yet to amend
the law.
There does not appear to have been any such aggressive lobbying effort from Vietnam for Huong, however.
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Vietnamese
national Doan Thi Huong is escorted into the Malaysian court hearing
the
assassination trial (AFP Photo/MOHD RASFAN)
|
There does not appear to have been any such aggressive lobbying effort from Vietnam for Huong, however.
Vietnam
generally does not get publicly involved in individual criminal cases overseas,
and foreign affairs officials did not respond to AFP’s request for comment
Monday.
In the
first stage of the trial that ran until August last year, prosecutors presented
their case.
Witnesses
described how the victim -- the estranged half-brother of Kim Jong Un and once
seen as heir apparent to the North Korean leadership -- died in agony shortly
after being attacked.
Prosecutors
said Aisyah and Huong were well-trained assassins but their lawyers argued the
four North Koreans were the masterminds, and provided them with poison on the
day of the murder.
South Korea
has accused the North of ordering the hit, which Pyongyang denies.
Malaysia
had been one of the nuclear-armed North's few allies but the assassination
badly damaged ties, and led to the countries expelling each other's
ambassadors.




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