Key Bangkok shrine bombing suspect arrested at border, says Thai PM
Authorities arrested a man on the Thai-Cambodian border who is accused of being a main plotter and organizer of the Aug. 17 terror attack on a Hindu shrine in Bangkok.
Authorities arrested a man on the Thai-Cambodian border who is accused of being a main plotter and organizer of the Aug. 17 terror attack on a Hindu shrine in Bangkok.
Thai security officials have arrested a foreign man believed to be a prime suspect in the Aug. 17 bombing that killed 20 people at a Bangkok shrine, Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha announced Tuesday.
General Prayut, the head of the country鈥檚 military government, said authorities arrested the man near the Thai-Cambodian border while he was attempting to flee the country.
But his arrest does not bring the hunt for other suspects to an end. The prime minister described the man as a central figure in an alleged network that carried out the devastating attack at the Erawan shrine in downtown Bangkok, but did not say the man planted the bomb.聽
鈥淲e are looking for the bomber, the person who ordered it, and the person who used a phone,鈥 Prayut said, according to The New York Times. 鈥淲e have to arrest them all.鈥
Authorities arrested a 28-year-old foreign man Saturday on the outskirts of Bangkok but have yet to release his name, nationality, or suspected tie to the bombing network. The Associated Press reports that they found bomb-making materials in the raid.
On Monday, authorities issued arrest warrants for two more suspects, a Thai woman identified as Wanna Suansun and another foreign man. Thai police chief Somyot Pumpanmuang said the woman had contacted police and agreed to meet with them, reports Reuters.
While details of the attack remain vague, Reuters reports that security officials have been looking into a possible Turkish connection. Police said that Ms. Suansun鈥檚 family told them that she traveled to Turkey several months ago to work with her partner. The police said they found Turkish passports in the raid on Saturday.
As Reuters reports:
Sally Mairs reported Monday for 海角大神 that police have come to rely on a network of more than 100,000 motorcycle-taxi drivers for leads about the suspects.
The attack at Erawan shrine was the worst bombing in recent Thai history. Fourteen foreigners were among the 20 killed and more than 120 people injured in the blast.