In exchange of KimJong-Nam Body, Nine Malaysians arrive home safely

DN Correspondent

Nine Malaysians who were barred from leaving North Korea following a diplomatic stand-off post the assassination of Kim Jong -Un's half brother Kim Jong- Nam, have arrived in Kuala Lumpur.

Nine Malaysians held in the North Korea
Nine Malaysians held in the North Korea


Malaysia: Nine Malaysians who were barred from leaving North Korea following a diplomatic stand-off post the assassination of Kim Jong -Un's half brother Kim Jong- Nam, have arrived in Kuala Lumpur.

A diplomatic row ensued between between Malaysia and North Korea after Jong- Nam was killed on February 13 at Kuala Lampur airport, triggering the expulsion of each other's ambassadors and a barr on their citizens from leaving.

Also read: Kim Jong-nam diplomatic row: Malaysia bans N. Korean citizens from leaving country

However North Korean on Thursday said both countries would lift their respective travel bans, and Kuala Lumpur would send the body of Jong-Nam to North Korea.

Malaysian Foreign Minister Anifah Aman said that the investigation into the murder of Jong-Nam would continue "to bring the perpetrators to justice".

"There can be no substitute for diplomacy, for level-headedness in dealing with such situations, and this has served Malaysia well in this instance," he said.

Thursday, Malaysian Prime Miniter Mohammad Najib Tun Razak confirmed, through Twitter, that the "diplomatic crisis is over".

Also read: Malaysian Police arrests second suspect in murder of Kim Jong Un's half-brother

"Following the completion of the autopsy on the deceased and receipt of a letter from his family requesting the remains be returned to North Korea, the coroner has approved the release of the body," Prime Minister Najib said in a report.

South Korea has blamed Pyongyang for the assassination, and Kuala Lumpur has sought several North Koreans for questioning, although the only one it arrested was released for lack of evidence.

However, Pyongyang has denied this and denounced Malaysia's investigation as an attempt to smear the secretive regime.

So far, two women - one Indonesian and one Vietnamese - have been detained, along with a North Korean man. Seven other North Koreans have been named as suspects or are wanted for questioning. (With ANI Inputs)

 

 










Related Stories