My daughter too ‘timid’ to kill
THE family of a Vietnamese woman identified as a suspect in the death of the half-brother of North Korea’s ruler confirmed yesterday that she is their relative, but said they believe she didn’t knowingly participate in the killing.
Doan Thi Huong is thought to be one of two women seen approaching Kim Jong Nam on February 13 at a Kuala Lumpur airport. Kim died later after telling airport staff his face had been sprayed with a liquid.
Huong and a female suspect from Indonesia have been arrested by Malaysian authorities, along with two men carrying identity documents from North Korea and Malaysia.
Speaking at their simply furnished house in a farming village in Nam Dinh province, Doan Van Thanh, 63, confirmed that Huong is his daughter but said he couldn’t believe she would commit such a crime.
“How could she have dared to do such an earth-shaking thing?” Thanh said. “She was scared of rats and toads, she would not have dared to do it.”
Huong’s niece, 18-year-old Dinh Thi Quyen, said she believes Huong was fooled into taking part.
“My aunt is a very nice and kind person, but she easily trusted other people,” Quyen said. “I believe that my aunt was duped into doing it.”
Indonesia’s police chief has also said that the other female suspect, Indonesian Siti Aisyah, had been fooled into thinking she was part of a comedy show prank that involved spraying men in the face with water.
Thanh, a Vietnam War veteran who lost his right foot in a land mine explosion, said police visited him after Huong was arrested to check her identity and offered to help to protect her rights.
Thanh said his daughter left the village about 10 years ago to study at a pharmacy school in Hanoi. The last time the family saw her was during the Lunar New Year holiday in late January, when she spent five days at home.
Quyen said after the family heard that Huong was arrested in Malaysia, they tried to call her, but could not get through.
Vietnam’s state media have reported extensively on Kim’s death, but didn’t mention the arrest of a Vietnamese citizen until Monday.
The government has said it is still working with Malaysian officials to confirm Huong’s identity.
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