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Thailand police look into Turkish connection in Bangkok blast

August 27, 2015 By administrator

 blast in central Bangkok on Aug. 18. (Photo: Reuters)

blast in central Bangkok on Aug. 18. (Photo: Reuters)

Thai police said on Thursday they were looking at arrivals of Turkish nationals in the days before a Bangkok bomb attack that killed 20 people, but authorities in Turkey said they had received no request for assistance with the investigation.

Police in Thailand and some security analysts have raised the possibility of a connection in the Aug. 17 blast to the Turkic-speaking Muslim Uighur minority from the far west of China, who complain of Chinese government persecution.

The blast at the Hindu Erawan Shrine, popular with Asian tourists, killed 20 people, more than half of them foreigners.

Thailand last month deported more than 100 Uighurs to China, sparking condemnation by rights groups and a protest outside Thailand’s consulate in İstanbul. The treatment of Uighurs is an important issue for many Turks, who see themselves as sharing a common cultural and religious background.

Thai media reported that police were investigating 15 to 20 Turkish people who had entered the country over the two weeks before the blast.

National police spokesman Prawut Thavornsiri, asked about the reports, confirmed that police had been looking into the arrival of Turkish people.

“There are probably more Turkish coming into Thailand than that. We investigated groups which may have come into the country,” Prawut told reporters.

Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman Tanju Bilgiç said he was aware of reports in the Thai media that Turks may have been involved but said Ankara had received no requests for information or assistance from Thai authorities.

“Our minister called the newly appointed Thai foreign minister yesterday and they talked about bilateral relations and also the fight against terrorism. But this issue specifically was not discussed,” he told reporters.

“We told the Thai authorities: if you have any concrete information, please convey it to us. But until now nothing has been given to us,” he said.

The main evidence from the blast that police have is security camera footage showing a man with a yellow shirt and dark hair removing a backpack after entering the shrine, and walking away before the explosion.

Twelve of the 20 dead in the attack were foreigners, including people from China, Hong Kong, Britain, Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore.

Anthony Davis, a Bangkok-based security analyst with IHS-Jane’s, speaking at the Foreign Correspondents’ Club of Thailand on Monday, said there were not many groups with the motive and capability to pull off such an attack.

He said the most likely perpetrators were members of an ultra-nationalist Turkish organization called the Grey Wolves, a group not known to have engaged in any significant militant activity in recent years, beyond street clashes with rivals.

Davis said their motive may have been revenge for Thailand’s deportation of Uighurs to China.

“The Uighur cause is something they’ve latched onto in a big way,” he said, adding that the Grey Wolves were “at the front of the queue” during an attack on the Thai consulate in İstanbul last month by a mob protesting Thailand’s decision to deport the Uighurs.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Thailand, Turkish connection

Thai police focus on possible ‘Turkish connection’ in shrine bombing manhunt

August 23, 2015 By administrator

By Philip Sherwell, Bangkok

Police have been showing a Turkish passport to hotel staff and motorcycle taxi drivers as part of the enquiry

Police have been showing a Turkish passport to hotel staff and motorcycle taxi drivers as part of the enquiry

Police have reportedly been showing a copy of a Turkish passport as they question hotel staff and motorbike taxi drivers in the manhunt for the chief suspect in Bangkok’s worst terrorist atrocity

Thai police hunting for the Bangkok shrine bomber have shown a copy of a Turkish passport to hotel staff and motorcycle taxi drivers and asked about visitors from Turkey, it has been reported.

Thailand issued an arrest warrant for an unidentified “foreign man” last week, but the new development is the first public indication that investigators have focussed their manhunt on a suspect from a particular country.

However, investigators also reportedly said that they believed the passport might be fake.

Police have been visiting low-budget hotels and rental apartment buildings in a central Bangkok district with a significant population of local and foreign Muslims to question staff and scour guest records and security camera footage, The Telegraph has learned.

An official at a local mosque said that police had shown him the artist’s sketch of the chief suspect in Bangkok’s worst terrorist atrocity, described by police as having Caucasian or Middle East looks. “That man has never been to our mosque,” the official told The Telegraph.

A receptionist at a seedy nearby hotel, where rooms are rented by the hour, has now told the Khaosod English website that Thai officials showed her a copy of a passport that they identified as Turkish during questioning.

“I don’t know the person in the photo,” said Suthira Rompirom of the Niagara hotel. “I have worked here for five years already. I man the daytime desk. If he checked out I would have seen him. They showed me a photocopy of a passport they said was from Turkey.”

Motorcycle taxi drivers based at a stand near the hotel said they believed they had given the man rides, but several months ago. They said that they were also shown what officials described as a copy of a Turkish passport when they were questioned.

The mosque official said that police showed him a two-page list of hotels and apartment buildings in the nearby Silom and Sathorn areas that they were approaching as part of the investigation.

There have been reports that the main suspect took a motorcycle taxi to the Silom area after the blast.

But there is no firm indication that he even spent time in Bangkok before the bombings as he was driven to the Erawan shrine from the city’s main railway station by a tuk-tuk driver.

Mystery surrounds the motives for the blast and who was behind it. The Thai police have said they believe the chief suspect is a foreigner, but the country’s ruling junta has also insisted that the blast is not believed to be linked to international terrorist groups.

The possible Turkish connection has raised fresh speculation in Thailand that the blast may have a link to the Uighurs, an ethnic Turkic Muslim population in western China.

For the junta recently deported more than 100 Uighurs to China, despite strong protests that faced the risk of persecution there. But the scenario has so far been little more than speculative.

British and American intelligence agencies have been working with their Thai counterparts amid concerns that the attack could have been the work of Islamic terrorists.

Bangkok is known to have been used as a transit point for Islamic radicals and there have long been concerns that it could be a “soft target” for terrorists.

But there has been no claim of responsibility for the attack, which would have been expected from a group such as the Islamic State faction or al-Qaeda affiliates. And the blast killed Thais and ethnic Chinese tourists from other Asian countries, rather than targeting a site popular with Western visitors.

There has also been speculation that it could be linked to the country’s decade of domestic political turmoil, rifts within the ruling military or a long-running Malay Muslim insurgency in the south.

In a separate development, police said they were searching for a man shown in newly-released surveillance video at the scene of a second blast in the capital.

The CCTV footage could offer fresh clues as the country accepted an offer from the US to provide facial recognition technology to try to identify the chief suspect seen apparently planting the bomb that killed 20 people at the Erawan shrine.

The new surveillance footage was recorded at Bangkok’s riverfront less than half an hour after the explosion ripped threw crowds three miles away at the Erawan shrine on Monday evening

It shows a man in a blue shirt placing a bag on a small bridge, then using his smart phone before kicking the bag into the water near a busy pier.

At about 1pm the next day, an explosion took place in the water at the same location, sending a huge plume of spray over terrified by-passers but causing no injuries.

Police explosive experts have said the same sort of pipe bomb was used in both incidents, although they are still investigation any connection between the two blasts.

Filed Under: News Tagged With: police, thai, Turkish connection

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