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		Malaysia detains woman, seeking others in 
		connection with North Korean murder 
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		 [February 15, 2017] 
		By Ju-min Park and A. Ananthalakshmi 
 SEOUL/KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) - Malaysian 
		police on Wednesday detained a woman holding Vietnam travel papers and 
		are looking for a "few" other foreign suspects in connection with the 
		assassination of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un's estranged 
		half-brother, police said.
 
 Lawmakers in South Korea had earlier cited their spy agency as saying it 
		suspected two female North Korean agents had murdered Kim Jong Nam, and 
		U.S. government sources also told Reuters they believed North Korean 
		assassins were responsible.
 
 The portly and gregarious Kim Jong Nam, the eldest son of late North 
		Korean leader Kim Jong Il, was assaulted on Monday morning in the 
		departure hall of Kuala Lumpur International Airport and died on the way 
		to hospital, Malaysian police said.
 
 The woman detained at Kuala Lumpur airport was identified from CCTV 
		footage at the airport and was alone when she was apprehended, police 
		said in a statement.Media had earlier published a grainy CCTV-captured 
		image of a young woman wearing a white shirt with the letters "LOL" on 
		the front.
 
 Documents she carried were in the name of Doan Thi Huong, showed a birth 
		date of May 1998 and birthplace of Nam Dinh, Vietnam, police said.
 
 "Police are looking for a few others, all foreigners," Deputy 
		Inspector-General Noor Rashid Ibrahim told Reuters, declining to give 
		their nationalities or gender.
 
		
		 
		South Korean intelligence believes Kim Jong Nam was poisoned, the 
		lawmakers in South Korea's capital, Seoul, said.
 The spy agency told them that the young and unpredictable North Korean 
		leader had issued a "standing order" for his half-brother's 
		assassination, and that there had been a failed attempt in 2012.
 
 "The cause of death is strongly suspected to be a poisoning attack," 
		said South Korean lawmaker Kim Byung-kee, who was briefed by the spy 
		agency.
 
 Kim had been at the airport's budget terminal to catch a flight to Macau 
		on Monday when someone grabbed or held his face from behind, after which 
		he felt dizzy and sought help at an information desk, Malaysian police 
		official Fadzil Ahmat said.
 
 According to South Korea's spy agency, Kim Jong Nam had been living, 
		under Beijing's protection, with his second wife in the Chinese 
		territory of Macau, the lawmakers said. One of them said Kim Jong Nam 
		also had a wife and son in Beijing.
 
 Kim had spoken out publicly against his family's dynastic control of the 
		isolated state.
 
 "If the murder of Kim Jong Nam was confirmed to be committed by the 
		North Korean regime, that would clearly depict the brutality and 
		inhumanity of the Kim Jong Un regime," South Korean Prime Minister Hwang 
		Kyo-ahn, who is also acting president, told a security meeting.
 
 The meeting was called in response to Kim Jong Nam's death, news of 
		which first emerged late on Tuesday.
 
		'SENSE OF DANGER'
 South Korea is acutely sensitive to any sign of instability in isolated 
		North Korea, and is still technically in a state of war with its 
		impoverished and nuclear-armed neighbor, which carried out its latest 
		ballistic missile test on Sunday.
 
		
		 
		
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			Media journalists scuffle with a police officer as they try to 
			interview a North Korea official at the morgue at Kuala Lumpur 
			General Hospital where Kim Jong Nam's body is held for autopsy in 
			Malaysia February 15, 2017. REUTERS/Edgar Su 
            
			 
			Malaysian police said Kim held a passport under the name Kim Chol, 
			with a birth date that made him 46.
 Kim Jong Nam was known to spend a significant amount of time outside 
			North Korea, traveling in Macau and Hong Kong as well as mainland 
			China, and has been caught in the past using forged travel 
			documents.
 
 His body was taken on Wednesday to a second hospital, where an 
			autopsy was being performed. North Korean embassy officials had 
			arrived at the hospital and were coordinating with authorities, 
			police sources said.
 
 There was no mention of Kim Jong Nam's death in North Korean media.
 
 In Beijing, a foreign ministry spokesman said China was aware of the 
			reports and closely following developments.
 
 Yoji Gomi, a Japanese journalist who wrote a 2012 book on Kim Jong 
			Nam, said Kim's media appearances, which increased around the time 
			South Korean intelligence said he was targeted for assassination, 
			may have been an attempt to protect himself.
 
 "I now have the impression that even he may have had a sense of 
			danger, so he began exposing himself in the media and stating his 
			opinions to protect himself and counter North Korea," Gomi told a 
			talk show on Japan's NTV.
 
 North Korean agents have killed rivals abroad before.
 
 South Korea's spy agency said Kim Jong Nam wrote a letter to Kim 
			Jong Un in 2012 asking that the lives of him and his family be 
			spared, one of the lawmakers said.
 
 "Kim Jong Un may have been worried about more and more North Korean 
			elites turning against him after Thae Yong Ho defected to the 
			South," said Koh Yu-hwan, an expert on the North Korean leadership 
			at Dongguk University in Seoul, referring to last year's defection 
			by North Korea's deputy ambassador in London.
 
			
			 
			Numerous North Korean officials have been purged or killed since Kim 
			Jong Un took power following his father's death in 2011. Those 
			include his uncle Jang Song Thaek, who was considered the country's 
			second most-powerful person and was believed to have been close to 
			Kim Jong Nam.
 Jang was executed on Kim Jong Un's orders in 2013.
 
 (Reporting by Ju-min Park, Cynthia Kim, Hyunjoo Jin and Yun Hwan 
			Chae in SEOUL, Joseph Sipalan, Praveen Menon and Emily Chow in KUALA 
			LUMPUR, and Philip Wen in BEIJING; Writing by Tony Munroe and John 
			Chalmers)
 
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