The brother of Kim Jong-un, Kim Jong-nam, has been assassinated at an airport in the Malaysian capital, Kuala Lumpur.
Kim Jong-nam was the eldest son of former North Korean leader Kim Jong-il. From roughly 1994 to 2001, he was considered to be the heir apparent to his father and the next leader of North Korea.
Following a much-publicised attempt to secretly enter Japan using a fake passport and visit Tokyo Disneyland in May 2001, he was thought to have fallen out of favour with his father.
South Korean media has reported that Kim was assassinated with poisoned needles at Kuala Lumpur International Airport by two unidentified women, speculated to be North Korean agents.
Malaysian police official Fadzil Ahmat told The Korean Star:
“Someone had grabbed him from behind and splashed a liquid on his face and covered his face with a cloth laced with a liquid”.
Earlier reports spoke of a “spray”. Malaysian police confirmed Kim died while being transferred from the airport to a hospital, but said the cause was not yet known.
An absolutely terrifying piece on North Korea (NK) on BBC2 Newsnight last night. Usually on that program interviewees try to give nuanced answers (when they’re not a politician trying to evade the question entirely). Last night the two seemingly very well qualified experts, one the UK’s ex ambassador to North Korea, both had absolutely no hesitation whatsoever in giving a very, very straight answer to the question about whether, if NK fully developed the capability, it would use nukes. The answer was that if current NK leaders felt their regime was under threat then absolutely yes they would, without any doubt at all. The second interviewee went on to say that NK had even published a very detailed policy on its nuclear arms policy that supported the first expert’s answer and even contemplated first strike usage. As I said, really terrifying. At least we’re out of range for now but I wonder how scary it must be to live in the shadow of that in South Korea, Japan etc.