North Korea Leader's Half-Brother Killed At Malaysia Airport
The
half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, Kim Jong-nam, has been killed
in an attack in the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur.
Malaysian police say he was
waiting at the airport for a flight to Macau on Monday when a woman covered his
face with a cloth which burnt his eyes.
He was using a passport in a
different name at the time.
The late Kim Jong-il's eldest son is thought to have fled North
Korea after being passed over for the leadership.
Kim Jong-nam was attacked at
about 09:00 (01:00 GMT) on Monday while waiting at the budget terminal of Kuala
Lumpur International Airport for a 10:00 flight to Macau, Malaysia's Star newspaper reports, quoting police.
How the attack actually unfolded
is still unclear. Malaysian police official Fadzil Ahmat told The Star that Mr
Kim had alerted a receptionist, saying "someone had grabbed him from
behind and splashed a liquid on his face".
But quoted by Malaysian news agency Bernama, the same official
said a woman had come at him from behind and "covered his face with a
cloth laced with a liquid".
Earlier reports spoke of a "spray" being used or a
needle.
His eyes "suffered burns as
a result of the liquid", Fadzil Ahmat told Bernama, and he died on the way
to hospital in nearby Putrajaya.
"So far there are no suspects, but we have started
investigations and are looking at a few possibilities to get leads,"
Fadzil Ahmat told Reuters news agency separately.
News of Mr Kim's death was not
reported until Tuesday. An autopsy was conducted on his body but the results
have not yet been released.
South Korean media named the
victim early on Tuesday but the Malaysian authorities initially only reported
the sudden death of an unnamed North Korean national who had fallen ill at the
airport.
Police then released a statement
which quoted the victim's travel document identifying him as "Kim
Chol", born on 10 June 1970.
Kim Jong-nam was born on 10 May
1971.
Police finally confirmed that the
victim was indeed the half-brother of North Korea's leader.
It was not the first time Mr Kim
had travelled under an assumed identity: he was caught trying to enter Japan
using a false passport in 2001. He told officials he had been planning to visit
Tokyo Disneyland.
Bypassed in favour of his
youngest half-brother for succession when their father died in 2011, Kim
Jong-nam kept a low profile, spending most of his time overseas in Macau,
mainland China and Singapore.
He is said to have enjoyed the
slot machines in Macau, a Chinese territory famous for gambling.
The Tokyo Disneyland incident is thought to have spoilt his
chances of succeeding Kim Jong-il, who died in 2011.
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