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Politics

DPRK envoy at UN blames U.S., South Korea for VX assassination in Malaysia

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2017-03-14 08:31Xinhua Editor: Gu Liping ECNS App Download
Kim In Ryong, ambassador of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, speaks during a press conference at the United Nations headquarters in New York, March 13, 2017. (Xinhua/Li Muzi)

Kim In Ryong, ambassador of the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, speaks during a press conference at the United Nations headquarters in New York, March 13, 2017. (Xinhua/Li Muzi)

The Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK) ambassador to the United Nations on Monday denied the man assassinated in Malaysia was half-brother of the DPRK leader Kim Jong Un, saying the United States and South Korea should be blamed.

Ambassador Kim In Ryong told reporters here that the case of the assassination "is the product of reckless moves of the United States and South Korean authorities aimed to ... tarnish the image of the dignified DPRK and to bring down the Socialist system."

Kim spoke in response to a question on the assassination during a news conference he had called to condemn a recent UN Security Council statement denouncing recent DPRK ballistic missile launches as a threat to international peace and security.

But he acknowledged that the victim, who was poisoned to death in Kuala Lumpur International Airport on Feb. 13 by two assailants, is a citizen from the DPRK with a diplomatic passport.

"The United States and the South Korean authority are groundlessly blaming the DPRK, asserting that he was intoxicated by a highly poisonous VX nerve substance," Kim said, referring to the victim who has been identified by Malaysian authorities as the estranged half-brother of Kim Jong Un.

The ambassador said Washington wanted to "store up international repugnancy towards the DPRK ... to provoke nuclear war against the DPRK at any cost."

He also raised the question as to where the assailants were able to obtain such a banned chemical weapon as VX, pointing out the United States has "a stockpile" of such outlawed weapons.

Kim also said U.S. and South Korean assertions the assailants were unaffected while applying VX to a victim was an "absurdity."

 

  

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