The first ever North Korean national extradited to the United States appeared in court on Monday to face money laundering charges.

Mun Chol Myong, 55,  was not extradited by North Korea but brought to the United States from another “foreign country,” where he had been detained since May 2019, the Department of Justice said in a statement.

The Justice Department did not identify the country involved but North Korea severed diplomatic ties with Malaysia and closed its embassy on Sunday to protest Mun’s extradition.

Pyongyang called it an “unpardonable crime” carried out under “blind obedience” to American pressure.

The Justice Department said Mun is accused of laundering money through the US financial system between April 2013 and November 2018 to provide luxury items to North Korea.

“The indictment alleges that Mun defrauded banks and laundered money in an effort to evade counter-proliferation sanctions imposed on North Korea by the United States and the United Nations,” Assistant Attorney General John Demers said.

“We will continue to use the long reach of our laws to protect the American people from sanctions evasion and other national security threats.”

Alan Kohler, an FBI agent, said “one of the FBI’s biggest counterintelligence challenges is bringing overseas defendants to justice, especially in the case of North Korea.

“Thanks to the FBI’s partnership with foreign authorities, we’re proud to bring Mun Chol Myong to the United States to face justice, and we hope he will be the first of many,” Kohler said.

The Justice Department said Mun made an initial appearance on Monday in federal court in Washington to face six counts of money laundering in transactions valued at over $1.5 million.

The indictment alleges that Mun was affiliated with North Korea’s primary intelligence organisation, the Reconnaissance General Bureau.

Malaysia had been one of Pyongyang’s few allies, but ties were already strained following the 2017 assassination of leader Kim Jong Un’s half-brother at the Kuala Lumpur airport.

After Pyongyang cut ties, Malaysia gave North Korean diplomats 48 hours to leave the country.

On Sunday, the North Korean flag and a plaque were taken down from the country’s embassy — a large house in an upmarket area of Kuala Lumpur — and the gates were chained up.

Malaysia denounced Pyongyang’s move, and announced it would close its mission in North Korea, whose operations had already been suspended since the murder of Kim Jong Un’s half-brother.