gchristofi wrote: Do those plugs need a special tool or something?
You really need one of these to make it easy
..... but, there is a problem with your connector. When you insert the tool in order to press back the two barbs on the pin, you really have to hold the wire, not the casing, this allows the casing to move out of the way when the pins are being pressed down as there is a small lip in the casing which the barbs have to get past which stops the barbs from collapsing. under normal usage. Even if you get the barbs pressed down normally you just have to pull on the wire to extract the pin. This is going to be difficult in your case. However you might be able to botch something in order to extract the pin. Over to you.
If Darren can come up with a complete casing and pins, the best way to do this is to cut the wires close to the old casing and refit the wires to a complete new casing.
But I do wonder if all this is necessary as that broken wire, according to your earlier post, does no go to the ECU plug like the other cars do, so you are just connecting it to a random earth. It seems that a number of cars do not have that wire fitted but work with no problem as there is already an earth going to the other connector which appears to be sufficient for normal working of that unit. I would be inclined to forget it if the engine runs quite happily without it. Someone may have fitted it as an afterthought because some other cars do have that extra earth coming from the ECU.
John
1990 GTA Atmo, 2003 Jaguar X type 2.5SE Auto, 2018 Kia Picanto GT-Line-S 1.25