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Kim Jong Nam death: What we've learned 2 weeks on

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Malaysian police are looking for four more suspects, all of them North Korean, in connection with the mysterious death of Kim Jong Nam.
The story of Kim Jong Nam’s death has morphed into a murder-mystery filled with palace intrigue and geopolitical ramifications, topped with the surrealist tinge of reality television.
Here’s how the story got to this point.
Feb 13: The incident
Kim was scheduled to catch a flight from Kuala Lumpur to the Chinese-administered city of Macau on Monday, February 13, when he “felt like someone grabbed or held his face from behind,” according to Selangor State Criminal Investigations Department Chief Fadzil Ahmat.
Feeling dizzy, he then went to an airport customer assistance counter to seek medical help. Kim was taken to a clinic on the premises, which decided to call an ambulance and send him to the hospital. He died en route.
Feb 14: The news
News of Kim Jong Nam’s death broke on the night of Tuesday, February 14. Police initially described the incident as a “sudden death” pending the results of a post-mortem.
Malaysian authorities said Kim was traveling with a passport bearing the name Kim Chol.
Feb 15: Murder
South Korean officials announced they believed Kim’s death was murder and placed the blame on North Korea.
Lee Cheol Woo, the chairman of South Korea’s National Assembly Intelligence Committee, told reporters that Kim had been poisoned, and the suspects were “presumed to be two Asian females. ”
In Malaysia, police made the first two arrests in connection with the case, detaining Doan Thi Huong, a 30-year-old Vietnamese woman, at the airport and 26-year-old Muhammad Farid Bin Jalaluddin in the city of Anpang.
Feb 16: The LOL suspect
Police said Jalaluddin helped them locate another suspect: his girlfriend, a 25-year-old Indonesian woman named Siti Aisyah. She was arrested at 2 a.m. local time, Thursday, February 16.
Later that day police also confirmed the validity of the now-infamous “LOL” photo, an image from closed circuit security footage showing one of the female suspects in the case on Monday.
Authorities did not specify if it was Aisyah or Huong in the image.
Feb 17: The ‘prank’ and unwanted autopsy
Aisyah told police she thought she was participating in a prank for a TV show.
Indonesian police chief Tito Karnavian said that the suspect, Siti Aisyah, told police she had sprayed others in a similar manner three or four times, although only the Kim incident allegedly involved a dangerous substance.
Aisyah was given a few dollars for the job, unaware that she was being used as a tool in a potential assassination plot, Karnavian said.
Friday, February 17, was also the point tensions between North Korea and Malaysia boiled over publicly.
After news of the death broke Tuesday, Malaysian authorities announced they would be conducting an autopsy as part of its investigation — something North Korean officials later said they would not accept unless their officials can witness the procedure.
Pyongyang’s ambassador to Malaysia, Kang Chol, said Friday the country would reject the results of a “forced” autopsy on one of its citizens and demanded the immediate release of the body.
But Selangor Police Chief Abdul Samah Mat said without DNA from a next of kin, they wouldn’t hand over Kim Jong Nam’s body or release the autopsy report, which could reveal the cause of death.
A fourth arrest was also made on Friday.

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