Siti Aisyah and Vietnamese woman Doan Thi Huong are on trial for the Cold War-style assassination of Kim Jong Nam at Kuala Lumpur airport on February 13 last year while he was waiting for a flight to Macau.
Defence lawyers have argued that the women were recruited to take part in what they thought were prank TV shows but were instead tricked into becoming inadvertent assassins, in an elaborate plot by a group of North Korean agents.
The High Court in Shah Alam, outside Kuala Lumpur, earlier heard that Aisyah was offered money by Ri Ji U, a North Korean posing as a Japanese man named "James", to carry out what she was told were practical jokes for TV shows in shopping malls, hotels and airports.
Aisyah's lawyer Gooi Soon Seng said Thursday that the supposed pranks involved sneaking up behind people and smearing their face with a lotion -- apparent practice runs for the attack on Kim, which was carried out in a similar fashion.
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Aisyah carried out three pranks at the airport, for which she was paid $600, the police's chief investigating officer Wan Azirul Nizam Che Wan Aziz testified.
On her return to Malaysia, she conducted another four pranks at Kuala Lumpur International Airport in early February, Wan Azirul said.
The court heard after a prank on February 7, she posted a message on Facebook saying: "Last day of shooting, hopefully I will gain their trust and my contract will be extended."
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