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Nine M’sians 'held hostage' in N Korea arrive home

Nine Malaysians who were barred from leaving North Korea  arrived at KLIA in a military plane at 5.03am today.

The nine Malaysians were not allow to leave Pyongyang in the aftermath of the murder of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's half-brother Kim Jong-nam here last month.

The nine are Malaysian Embassy staff and their families, namely Noor Saaidah Jamaludin, 29, (ambassador's secretary), her husband Mohd Radzuan Othman, 29, their eight-month-old son Mohamad Radhiy; S Nirmala Malar, 45, (administrative officer); Mohd Nor Azrin Md Zain, 37, (counselor), his wife Iza Karmila Ramli, 35, and their three children, Annur Zulaikha, six, Aynur Zhafirah, five, and Ayscha Zinnirah, three.      

All came home via a special aircraft which arrived at the Bunga Raya Complex, KL International Airport (KLIA) early this morning and were welcomed by their respective family members.   

Also on hand to welcome them was Foreign Minister Anifah Aman. 

According to Mohd Nor Azrin, the nine were not harassed by Pyongyang authorities during the travel ban and life went on as usual in the North Korean capital.

Prime Minister Najib Abdul Razak in a statement last night announced that the nine were allowed by the North Korean government to return to Malaysia. 

Najib, in a posting on Twitter earlier, said: "Alhamdulillah (Praise be to Allah) the Special Aircraft carrying the nine Malaysians has flown out of North Korean airspace. The diplomatic crisis is over."

Following the development, the prime minister said Malaysia had now allowed North Korean citizens in the country to leave.

A deal was apparently stitched with Pyongyang in which Jong-nam’s body was sent to North Korea. It was put on board a Malaysian Airlines (MAS) flight bound for Beijing at 7.39pm yesterday.

Tensions between Kuala Lumpur and Pyongyang arose following the murder of Jong-nam, 46, at KLIA2 on Feb 13.

Two foreign women daubed the face of Jong-nam with the nerve agent VX while he was waiting for a flight to Macau.

Subsequently, Jong-nam was pronounced dead on arrival at Putrajaya Hospital. 

On March 1, two women, Siti Aisyah, 25, an Indonesian, and Vietnamese Doan Thi Huong, 29, were charged in the Sepang magistrate's court in relation to the killing.

The diplomatic tiff came about after North Korea's ambassador to Malaysia Kang Chol made wild allegations against Malaysia on how it handled the case, resulting in Malaysia declaring him persona non grata.

He left Kuala Lumpur on March 6. 

Pyongyang retaliated by expelling Malaysia's ambassador to North Korea.

On March 7, Pyongyang barred Malaysians in North Korea from leaving that country and Kuala Lumpur took the same action in a tit-for-tat move.  

- Bernama

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