Malaysian police said on Friday it won't discharge the body of the offended stepbrother of North Korean pioneer Kim Jong Un until it gets DNA tests from his closest relative.
Police are examining the murder of Kim Jong Nam, the eldest child of the late North Korean pioneer Kim Jong Il.
Kim, 46, passed on Monday subsequent to being attacked at Kuala Lumpur International Airport with what was thought to be a quick acting toxin.
Two female suspects, one an Indonesian and the other conveying Vietnamese travel reports, have been captured. A Malaysian man has likewise been kept to help with request.
Police are as yet chasing four men accepted to have been associates in Kim's murder.
South Korea's spy office told officials in Seoul that it trusted North Korean specialists had executed Kim, following up on requests from North Korea's pioneer Kim Jong Un. U.S. authorities disclosed to Reuters they likewise trusted North Korean specialists were dependable.
The North Korean international safe haven formally asked for on Thursday, for the group of Kim Jong Nam to be discharged by Malaysia, having prior attempted futile to influence Malaysian specialists not to do a dissection.
Selangor state police boss Abdul Samah Mat revealed to Reuters the body would not be discharged until closest relative DNA had been gotten to affirm the character of the casualty.
"We are as yet sitting tight for the closest relative application, we have not gotten it yet. We have just gotten the application from the North Korean consulate yesterday," the police boss said. "We have to gather DNA tests from the closest relative with a specific end goal to get definitive proof on the casualty's character."
North Korea has made no open reference to Kim Jong Nam's demise, and calls to the international safe haven in Malaysia were unanswered.
Kim Jong Nam had stood up openly against his family's dynastic control of the detached, atomic outfitted North Korea.
South Korea's insight organization told officials in Seoul
that Kim had been living with his second spouse in the Chinese domain of Macau, where he got China's insurance.
He had been at the air terminal to get a flight to Macau when he was murdered.
Cornelia Charito Siricord, chief of crime scene investigation inside the science service, revealed to Reuters that an examination was being completed on tests taken from the body to help the police build up the reason for death.

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