Thailand's national police spokesman Prawut Thavornsiri holds a tablet displaying an e-fit of an unnamed foreign man, wanted for questioning after bomb making materials were found in a Bangkok apartment he allegedly rented. Nicolas Asfouri / AFP Photo
Thailand's national police spokesman Prawut Thavornsiri holds a tablet displaying an e-fit of an unnamed foreign man, wanted for questioning after bomb making materials were found in a Bangkok apartment he allegedly rented. Nicolas Asfouri / AFP Photo
Thailand's national police spokesman Prawut Thavornsiri holds a tablet displaying an e-fit of an unnamed foreign man, wanted for questioning after bomb making materials were found in a Bangkok apartment he allegedly rented. Nicolas Asfouri / AFP Photo
Thailand's national police spokesman Prawut Thavornsiri holds a tablet displaying an e-fit of an unnamed foreign man, wanted for questioning after bomb making materials were found in a Bangkok apartme

Second suspect arrested over Bangkok bombing


  • English
  • Arabic

BANGKOK // Thailand’s prime minister said Tuesday a second foreign man has been arrested at a checkpoint on the Cambodian border on suspicion of involvement in last month’s deadly shrine bombing.

It was the second confirmed arrest in connection with the August 17 blast that tore through a religious shrine in central Bangkok and killed 20 people, mostly ethnic Chinese devotees.

Prayut Chan Ocoha, who also heads the nation’s junta, was asked by reporters to comment on rumours a man had been detained.

“It’s true. He has been arrested at Sa Kaeo checkpoint,” Mr Prayut said, referring to the Thai side of a border crossing with Cambodia.

Asked whether he is thought to be the person who planted the bomb at the Erawan shrine in Bangkok’s busy Chidlom shopping district he replied: “We are interrogating. He is a main suspect and a foreigner.”

The motive for the blast — Thailand’s worst single mass-casualty attack — remains shrouded in mystery.

Suspicion has variously fallen on Thailand’s bitter political rivals, organised criminal gangs, Islamist militants, rebels in the kingdom’s strife-torn south and sympathisers of refugees from China’s Uighur minority.

Arrest warrants have been issued for several people in connection with the blast.

The only named warrant is for a 26-year-old Thai Muslim woman called Wanna Suansan.

* Agence France-Presse