Calgary Herald

BANGKOK BLAST

Thai capital rocked by explosion

- JERRY HARMER AND ANUSONADIS­AI NATTASUDA

A bomb exploded Monday within a central Bangkok shrine that is among the city’s most popular tourist spots, killing at least 18 people and injuring more than 100 across a hectic intersecti­on surrounded by five- star hotels and upscale shopping malls.

Police discovered at least two additional unexploded bombs inside the shrine and said other bombs may have been placed in the area and yelled at bystanders: “Get out! Get out!”

With a powerful flash caught on security video and a boom heard blocks away, the blast from the improvised explosive device scattered body parts across Rachapraso­ng intersecti­on, spattered blood, blasted windows and burned motorbikes to the metal. It exploded during evening rush hour as the area was filled with tourists, office workers and shoppers.

“Suddenly there was a big boom, and the whole room just shook, like someone dropped a wrecking ball on top of our ceiling,” said Pim Niyomwan, an English instructor working on the eighth floor of the building right next to the shrine.

“The whole building just shook. My four students were hysterical.”

Video shortly after the blast depicts a scene of shock and desperatio­n: People running for their lives and crying amid the debris. An emergency worker in an ambulance franticall­y pounded the chest of a victim.

No one immediatel­y claimed responsibi­lity for the bombing.

“Those who have planted this bomb are cruel,” said national police Chief Somyot Poompummua­ng. “They aim to kill because everyone knows that at 7 p. m. the shrine is crowded with Thais and foreigners. Planting a bomb there means they want to see a lot of dead people.”

At least 18 people were confirmed dead and 117 injured, according to the Narinthorn emergency medical rescue centre. The dead included Chinese and a Filipino, Somyot said.

As a single, devastatin­g blow to this southeast Asian metropolis, Monday’s bombing has no equal in recent history, although Thailand is no stranger to violent attacks. An insurgency more than a decade ago by southern Muslim separatist­s left more than 5,000 dead far from the capital.

Police said the bomb was made with a pipe wrapped in cloth.

“We still don’t know for sure who did this and why,” Deputy Prime Minister Prawit Wongsuwon said. “We are not sure if it is politicall­y motivated, but they aim to harm our economy and we will hunt them down.”

The bomb detonated at Erawan Shrine, which is dedicated to the Hindu god Brahma, but is extremely popular among Thailand’s Buddhists as well as Chinese tourists. Although Thailand is predominan­tly Buddhist, it has enormous Hindu influence on its religious practices and language.

The shrine, adjacent to a five- star hotel, is at the intersecti­on of two major arteries in the city. Throngs of tourists come there to pray at all hours, lighting incense and offering flowers purchased from rows of stalls set up on the sidewalk along the shrine.

The site is a hubbub of activity, with quiet worshipper­s sometimes flanked by Thai dancers hired by those seeking good fortune, while groups of tourists shuffle in and out.

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 ?? PORNCHAI KITTIWONGS­AKUL/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Rescue workers carry an injured person after a bomb exploded at a religious shrine in central Bangkok at rush hour on Monday.
PORNCHAI KITTIWONGS­AKUL/ GETTY IMAGES Rescue workers carry an injured person after a bomb exploded at a religious shrine in central Bangkok at rush hour on Monday.

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