N. Korean defector sends leaflets with Kim Jong Nam news over the border

A North Korean defector is packing balloons with information about Kim Jong Nam's death and floating them north from South Korea.

Park Sang-hak, who says he defected in 1993 after picking up a leaflet sent from South Korea, told CNN he wants to show ordinary North Koreans the true nature of the country's leader.

Kim Jong Nam was the eldest half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un.

Malaysian authorities allege North Korean agents killed Kim Jong Nam by wiping the highly toxic VX nerve agent on his face at an airport in Kuala Lumpur on February 13.

People pack balloons filled with content about the killing of Kim Jong Nam, the half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, that they hope will float across the border into North Korea.

People pack balloons filled with content about the killing of Kim Jong Nam, the half-brother of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, that they hope will float across the border into North Korea.

South Korean intelligence officials say the North Korean leader directly ordered the killing, a claim Pyongyang vehemently denies.

A man holds a poster identifying Kim Jong Nam as "the dead" and Kim Jong Un as "the murderer." Under the photographs, it says "ruthless barbarian Kim Jong Un who cruelly murdered his oldest brother, Kim Jong Nam with VX (biochemical weapon) that the world has banned as a weapon of mass destruction."

"Even South Koreans were shocked to hear the news of Kim Jong Nam's assassination," Park said.

"Can you imagine how North Koreans will react?"

News of the killing has likely gone unreported in North Korea, where the press is tightly controlled by the government.

Park hopes the leaflets, SD cards and USB drives will offer people inside North Korea a glimpse of the outside world, including Kim Jong Nam's death.

The killing has sparked a diplomatic row that's left citizens from both countries trapped in Malaysia and North Korea, respectively.

Park has previously used balloons to send pamphlets and other pieces of information to North Korea.

Pyongyang considers it a hostile act and tells its citizens the leaflets are South Korean propaganda, defectors say.

The North Korean government has tried to kill Park before, likely in part due to his campaign to get information inside North Korea.

News Courtesy: www.cnn.com