Witnesses claim 'LOL assassin' stayed in cheap hotels, carried wads of cash and borrowed scissors to cut her hair the day before 'poisoning Kim Jong-un's half-brother' Attack on Kim Jong-nam by 'North Korean hit squad' lasted just 'five seconds' 'Assassins' had been watching him in terminal and struck when he was in queue A 'cloth drenched in a chemical' was then 'clamped over Jong-nam's face' Last words are said to have been: 'Very painful, very painful, I was sprayed liquid' Victim, the half-brother of Kim Jong-un, had criticised the North Korean regime Two women and one man have since been arrested by Malaysian police
Mena: This story looks like a James Bond movie script. Kim Jung nan the rich playboy brother of the North Korean dictator Kim Jong un (who is always making the Western World, South Korea, China and Japan angry by testing nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles) was assassinated in Kuala Limpur airport in Malaysia by being injected with poisoned by two women one of them wearing a LOL Tshirt. The Western media is speculating that North Korean dictator Kim Jung un ordered the killing of his brother but China and South Korea spy agencies could have also killed Kim Jung an either to framed Kim Jung un or to warned him to stop misbehaving.
Kim Jong-nan, pictured, is believed to have been killed in an attack that lasted just 'five seconds' at an airport in Malaysia
The 'LOL assasin' (left) who allegedly murdered Kim Jong-nan, right, by wiping poison on his face may have been 'duped into killing him' by 'friends who told her it was a harmless prank'
How the chillingly audacious murder of North Korean tyrant's brother in a major airport may have involved a poisonous handkerchief and fountain pen
A woman walks past an oceanfront villa (centre, left), one of the properties where Kim Jong-Nam, half-brother of a North Korean leader Kim Jong-Un, was believed to have lived in Macau
South Korean security experts believe North Korea, under dictator Kim Jong-Un (pictured), may have ordered the assassination
His profile suggests he studied at the International School of Geneva and at the Lycée français de Moscou
Kim Jong-Nam's 'careless' use of Facebook and emails may have led to his assassination, it has been reported. He is shown in one of his Facebook photos
Former North Korean leader Kim Jong Il (bottom left) poses with his first-born son Kim Jong Nam (bottom right), in this 1981 family photo in Pyongyang, North Korea
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