North Korean man arrested over killing of Kim Jong-nam

A police officer looks at his mobile phone as he stands guard outside the morgue at Kuala Lumpur General Hospital where Kim Jong Nam's body is held for autopsy in Malaysia, February 17, 2017. /REUTERS
A police officer looks at his mobile phone as he stands guard outside the morgue at Kuala Lumpur General Hospital where Kim Jong Nam's body is held for autopsy in Malaysia, February 17, 2017. /REUTERS

A North Korean national has been arrested over the killing of North Korean leader Kim Jong-un's half-brother, Malaysian police say.

The first North Korean to be arrested over Kim Jong-nam's death was named as Ri Jong Chol, 46.

An Indonesian woman, a Malaysian man and a woman with a Vietnamese passport were detained earlier.

Police believe poison was sprayed into Kim's face as he waited to board a flight from Kuala Lumpur to Macau.

They say the latest suspect was detained on Friday evening in Selangor, near the Malaysian capital. No further details were given.

Indonesia's national police chief said on Friday one of the detained women, an Indonesian national named as Siti Aisyah, said she had paid to perform what she thought was a prank.

A Malaysian man thought to be her boyfriend was detained along with her.

The woman carrying a Vietnamese passport has been identified as Doan Thi Huong.

Malaysian police have now finished Kim Jong-nam's post-mortem examination, though the results have not yet been made public.

North Korea has meanwhile demanded that Malaysia immediately release the body. Malaysia is refusing to do so until it receives a DNA sample from Kim's next-of-kin.

South Korea's intelligence agency has accused the country's rivals in the north of assassinating Kim Jong-nam, saying Pyongyang had wanted to kill him for years but that he was being protected by China.

Kim was largely estranged from his family, after being passed over for the North Korean leadership in favour of his youngest half-brother. He spent most of his time overseas in Macau, mainland China and Singapore.

He had spoken out in the past against his family's dynastic control of North Korea and in a 2012 book was quoted as saying he believed his younger half-brother lacked leadership qualities.

But he had said he was not interested in assuming the leadership himself.

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