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https://scmp.com/news/asia/southeast-asia/article/1886445/thai-police-say-arrests-made-abroad-connection-bangkok-bomb
Asia/ Southeast Asia

Thai police say arrests made abroad in connection with Bangkok bomb

Police officers secure the front entrance of the US embassy as supporters of Thai nationalist monk Buddha Issara (not seen) hold a protest in Bangkok on November 27, 2015. An arch-royalist Thai monk led a protest against the United States envoy to Thailand after he criticised the jailing of civilians under the kingdom's tough royal defamation law. AFP PHOTO / Nicolas ASFOURI

Thai police said on Thursday that suspects wanted in connection with a bomb that ripped through a Bangkok shrine, killing 20 people, have been arrested abroad and that Thailand was in the process of requesting their extradition.

More than 120 people were wounded in the August blast, the worst peacetime bombing in Thailand’s history.

So far, arrest warrants have been issued for 17 people in connection with the attack. Police have said many are thought to have fled abroad.

“We have caught more people with arrest warrants out for them in connection to this case, including Thais and foreigners, but they are currently abroad and we are in the process of working with the attorney general and foreign affairs ministry to bring them to Thailand,” Police Lieutenant General Srivara Rangsibrahmanakul, deputy national police chief, told reporters.

“I cannot give more details on this as it is a sensitive matter and could impact diplomatic relationships.”

There has been strong criticism of the police investigation because few facts have been clearly established. Authorities were also accused of failing to seal off the crime scene properly and rapidly hosing down the pavement before forensic evidence was recovered.

Wreckage of motorcycles at the scene of a blast in central Bangkok August 17, 2015. Photo: Reuters
Wreckage of motorcycles at the scene of a blast in central Bangkok August 17, 2015. Photo: Reuters

It was not immediately clear if those detained would return to Thailand to appear in court.

Two suspects arrested in Thailand were indicted by a military court last month and are currently being held at a Bangkok military base. Ten charges were brought against the pair, including illegal possession of weapons, premeditated murder and murder for the bombing.

Documents sent by prosecutors to the military court say the two men are Chinese nationals from the Muslim Uyghur minority.

The men will formally hear the charges against them in February.

Police have said that the blast was in retaliation for a crackdown on human smuggling gangs earlier this year. They ruled out any link to the repatriation of 109 Uyghurs to China in July.

The Uyghurs are a Turkic-language speaking group that calls China's western Xinjiang region home. Some Turks see themselves as sharing cultural and religious bond with their Uyghur “brothers”.

The Uyghur issue is sensitive for the Thai government and any link between the bomb and the deportation of people at China's behest could expose it to censure that its foreign policy led to the bomb attack.