KUALA LUMPUR: Malaysia will deport 50 North Koreans for overstaying their visas, the deputy prime minister said Tuesday, in an apparent exception to a departure ban after the assassination of Kim Jong-Nam.
The killing of the half-brother of North Korea’s leader Kim Jong-Un last month in Malaysia with VX nerve agent triggered an angry standoff between Kuala Lumpur and Pyongyang that has seen them expel each other’s ambassador and refuse to let their citizens leave. But on Tuesday Deputy Prime Minister Ahmad ZahidHamidi told reporters that 50 North Koreans working in the state of Sarawak on Borneo island home to coal mines which often employ foreign workers would be deported from Malaysia despite the ban.
“We will send the North Korean workers in Sarawak who have exceeded their (working) visa back to Pyongyang for overstaying,” he said.
“They will be deported soon.”
He did not say why the government had decided on the expulsion despite Kuala Lumpur’s bar on North Korean nationals leaving the country — a tit-for-tat measure put in place after Pyongyang prohibited Malaysians from leaving its borders last week.
The diplomatic crisis erupted last month after North Korea attacked the Malaysian investigation into Kim’s killing as an attempt to smear the secretive regime. Three Malaysian embassy staff and six family members are stranded in North Korea as a result. “It’s an effort to preserve the body, because if it is kept in the mortuary it might decompose so we did this to preserve the body,” he said.Agencies