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Bangkok bomb: Erawan shrine attacker 'is part of network', police say
(FRANKS..)
he bomb attack that killed 20 people
at Bangkok's Erawan shrine on Monday was carried out by a "network",
Thailand's chief of police has said.
Police have released a sketch
of the main suspect, a man in a yellow T-shirt who was filmed by
security cameras leaving a backpack at the shrine.
Police later said two other people seen on CCTV were being treated as suspects.
Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha has described the incident as the worst-ever attack on Thailand.
The Hindu shrine, popular with tourists and Buddhists, reopened on Wednesday.
'Hired to plant bomb'
Police chief Somyot Poompanmoung told the Associated Press news
agency that the shrine attack was the work of more than one person.
"He
didn't do it alone for sure," he said, referring to the main suspect.
"It's a network," he added, without giving further information. But he
said he was certain that Thai citizens were involved in the bombing.
Although
the main suspect in the footage has not been identified, an arrest
warrant for him has been issued by Bangkok's Southern Criminal Court. It
accuses an "unnamed foreigner" of conspiracy to commit "premeditated
murder" and weapons offences.
Police spokesman Prawut Thawornsiri said in a TV interview that the man could be of "mixed origin".
Bangkok bomb attack
Media captionPeople have been visiting the Erawan shrine to pray, as Stephen Evans reports
A reward of one million baht ($28,000; £17,950) has been offered for information leading to his arrest.
Mr
Prawut also said that two other men seen in the grainy CCTV footage
were being sought. "The person in red and the person in white are also
suspects," he said.
The BBC's Steve Evans in Bangkok says the new
information implies this may have been an organised international
operation, perhaps with a religious motive.
The prime minister
urged the main suspect to surrender to the police because he might
otherwise "get killed to stop him from talking".
Mr Prayuth told reporters the man must have been hired to plant the bomb.
However,
our correspondent says there are indications the main suspect was
driven to the airport after the attack and may well have flown.
An arrest warrant has been issued for an "unnamed foreigner"
The statue of the Hindu god Brahma was slightly damaged in Monday's attack
The shrine reopened at about
08:00 local time (01:00 GMT), with a handful of people arriving to place
flowers or light incense in front of the slightly damaged statue of the
Hindu god Brahma.
A BBC reporter at the scene says there appears
to be low security in place, with the public free to walk in unchecked.
She says the last human remains were only cleared from the site earlier
on Wednesday.
Most of the victims of Monday's attack were Thai,
but nationals from China, Hong Kong, the UK, Indonesia, Malaysia and
Singapore were among the foreigners killed.
No-one has yet said they carried out the attack.
Media captionThe suspect, in yellow, deposits a backpack on a bench before walking off
In
a separate attack on Tuesday, an explosive device was thrown at a pier
in Bangkok. No-one was hurt, but the authorities have not ruled out a
link between the incidents.
Maj Gen Weerachoon Sukhontapatipak, a
spokesman in the military government, earlier told the BBC that the
authorities were "quite close" to identifying the suspect caught on CCTV
at the shrine.
The man is seen carefully removing his backpack
inside the shrine - at the spot the bomb went off - then getting up
without it and immediately leaving.
Gen Sukhontapatipak said no
motive was being ruled out and the character of the bombing was "quite
different" from previous attacks by Islamist separatists in southern
Thailand.
Speaking in a television address on Tuesday evening, Mr
Prayuth said the attack showed that Thailand "still has a person or a
group of people with hostility to the nation operating actively".
"They
may be doing it for a political motive or to undermine the economy or
tourism or for other reasons," he said, according to the Bangkok Post.
He also warned against speculation on possible perpetrators, saying it could cause panic or mislead the investigation.
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