Sale of North Korean 'embassy' in Tokyo delayed over money-laundering claim
Rights group says mysterious Mongolian firm seeking to pay over the odds for Tokyo building is probably a front for Kim Jun-un

A Japanese court has intervened to delay the sale of North Korea's de facto embassy in Tokyo to a mysterious Mongolian firm.

When a Japanese television team arrived at the Mongolian address to ask about the purchase of the 10-storey building that is now occupied by Chongryon, the organisation that represents North Korean residents of Japan, and the prime plot it occupies in Chiyoda Ward, they were met by a bemused woman.
She told the TV crew her family had been living in the apartment for seven years and had never heard of Avar.
"I told the court that this was a typical case of money laundering and that the court cannot permit the transaction to go ahead," Kato told the South China Morning Post. "The address is fake and the registration of the company must therefore be illegal."
No deadline has been set for the court to make a decision on whether the transaction will go ahead, but Kato is confident any investigation will lead back to the North Korean leader. "Kim Jong-un wants to save face and not lose this property and I'm sure the decision to pay more than the market value is a case of a dictator's whim," he said.