A Vietnamese woman accused of killing the North Korean leader’s brother pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of "causing hurt by a dangerous weapon".
Doan Thi Huong, who is the only suspect in custody for the killing, has been handed a prison term of three years and four months in a Malaysian court on Monday.
Her lawyer said she could be freed by May.
The surprise reduction in charges came after authorities rejected a request for her murder charge, which carried a mandatory death penalty, to be dropped entirely.
Earlier, the attorney-general withdrew the charge against Indonesian co-defendant Siti.
Kim Jong-Nam was assassinated at Kuala Lumpur Airport in 2017 in broad daylight, with the toxic nerve agent VX.

Hezbollah warns Israeli residents to evacuate towns near border
US House rejects war powers resolution, backs Trump on Iran war
GCC and EU ministers urge immediate halt to Iranian attacks
Indonesia says it will withdraw from Board of Peace if it does not benefit Palestinians
Trump wants say on Iran's next leader
