Siti Aisyah, from Indonesia, and Doan Thi Huong of Vietnam are the only suspects in custody in the February 13 killing of Kim, the estranged half brother of North Korea's ruler. Four North Korean suspects fled the country the day of the murder, police say.
"The accused person should not be denied her fundamental right to a fair trial," said Aisyah's attorney, Gooi Soon Seng. He said he has been waiting for police to provide CCTV footage and statements from three North Korean men who were questioned and released.
The judge postponed the hearing until May 30.
The women are accused of smearing Kim's face with banned VX nerve agent at a crowded airport terminal in Kuala Lumpur. But they say they were duped into thinking they were playing a harmless prank for a hidden-camera show.
The women face the death penalty if convicted.
Gooi said he fears the women will become scapegoats because all the other people believed to have knowledge of the case have left the country.
Malaysian police have said they questioned the three men and found no grounds to hold them. But Gooi said today that at least one of those three men identified by police as Ri Ji U and known to Aisyah as "James" was key to her defence.
Gooi told The Associated Press yesterday that James recruited Aisyah in early January to star in his video prank shows. Over the course of several days, he had her rub oil or pepper sauce on a victim's face, "from forehead downwards," which he would film on his phone, the lawyer said.
They practised at malls, hotels and airports, he said. Aisyah was paid USD 100-USD 200 for each prank and hoped the income would allow her to stop working as a social escort, Gooi said.
Gooi said Hong asked Aisyah to do several more pranks at the Kuala Lumpur airport a few days before Kim was attacked. He said Aisyah met Hong at the airport on the day of the killing, and that Hong identified Kim to Aisyah and allegedly put the poison on her hand.
Tram Hux Hoang, a cousin of the Vietnamese suspect, said she is doing well in prison and had even gained weight.
"The family and many Vietnamese people believe that she is innocent," he said outside court today. "We believe she was cheated and we hope that the truth will come out.
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