Asked about the possibility that North Korean agents might have imported the world’s most toxic nerve agent and deployed it in an international airport, a source close to the Malaysian government commented: “Not very diplomatic.”
South Korea said the use of VX was a “blatant violation” of international norms. “We are shocked by the latest revelation by the Malaysian authorities that VX … was used in the death of Kim Jong-nam,” Seoul’s foreign ministry said in a statement. “The use of any chemical weapons is strictly banned for any reason and in any place,” it added.
Khalid said authorities were determining how VX entered the country and that the terminal where Kim Jong-nam was killed, in a budget airline departure lounge, would be decontaminated. As a weapon, VX does not quickly dissipate and can remain on material or the ground for long periods.
An employee at Malaysia Airports Holdings, the company that manages the airport, told the Guardian it had not closed the terminal or been contacted by police about a decontamination since the attack 11 days ago.
China, which afforded a level of protection to Kim Jong-nam during his stays there and in Macau, issued a cautious response to the revelations.
The Chinese foreign ministry spokesman Geng Shuang told reporters Beijing was aware of media reports about the use of chemicals classified by the UN as a weapon of mass destruction.
“We have also noted the relevant remarks made by Malaysia and the latest developments,” Geng said. “So far we have seen only preliminary information. There has been no conclusion with regards to this incident.”
Liang Yabin, a research fellow at the institute of international strategic studies at the Communist party’s Central Party School, said that, if confirmed, the use of such chemical weapons at an international airport would represent a violation of Malaysian sovereignty and be “simply intolerable”.
Liang said the incident was potentially “a justifiable act of war” and that Beijing would increase airport security and the monitoring of people travelling into China from North Korea.
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