April 25, 2024

‘Mum, I was tricked’: my daughter, the Kim Jong-nam murder suspect

As judge prepares key ruling, Siti Aisyah’s mother recounts her daughter’s journey from aspiring TV star to suspected tool of North Korean regime.

In the beginning, there were a few times that Benah pretended not to know her daughter, Siti Aisyah. She just couldn’t face the questions.

One day while Benah was visiting the doctor in town the receptionist recognised the name of her sleepy Javanese village, Rancasumur – a name popularised by the nightly news. “How far away is your house from Siti’s?” the receptionist asked, leaning in conspiratorially. “Oh, it’s far,” replied Benah, “I don’t even know her.”

But at home, away from prying strangers and gossipy neighbours, the Indonesian mother could hardly sleep – the claim that her daughter had assassinated Kim Jong-nam, the half brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un, was all too horrifying and surreal.

Benah outside the family home
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 Benah outside the family home. Photograph: Kate Lamb

In 2017 Siti, 26, and a Vietnamese woman, Doan Thi Huong, 30, were charged with murder, accused of smearing a lethal VX nerve agent over Kim Jong-nam’s face in Kuala Lumpur airport on 13 February.

Estranged from his younger half brother, Kim Jong-nam had spent the past decade in exile, critical of the regime he was once tipped to run. His death sparked allegations that Pyongyang had engineered an offshore political assassination – an accusation North Korea has denied. Four North Koreans are still wanted over the attack, which led to a diplomatic stand-off between North Korea and Malaysia and refocused attention on one of the world’s most isolated regimes with nuclear capabilities.

For more read the full of article at The Guardian

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