Shrine bomb wiped out family
Malaysian tourist loses his wife, son, sonin-law, granddaughter and sister-in-law
Malaysian tourist Neoh Hock Guan was just about to pray at Bangkok’s Erawan shrine on Monday when he dropped the candle he wanted to light.
“When I bent to pick it up, I heard the explosion,” he told the Malay Mail newspaper. “The next thing I knew, none of my family members were in sight.”
Mr Neoh’s wife, son, son- inlaw, and four- year- old granddaughter were all killed as the blast ripped through the shrine, twisting metal and shredding bodies in an unprecedented attack in the Thai capital.
It would be several grim hours before their remains were found, the 55-year-old said. Of the seven family members in the shrine on Monday evening, only he and his pregnant daughter survived.
The remains of a fifth family victim, his sister- in- law, have still not been identified.
“This incident is a black mark in our lives,” Mr Neoh said.
The bombing killed at least 20 people – including 11 foreigners, Mr Neoh’s family among them – and wounded more than 100. Bodies were peppered with ball bearings and motorcycles incinerated in the blast at one of Bangkok’s busiest intersections. No one has yet claimed responsibility.
A photograph taken earlier in the holiday and published in Malaysian media shows Mr Neoh, a cake seller from Penang, and his family posing happily at a restaurant in Bangkok, their table laden with Thai dishes and glasses of beer.
Their smiling Thai driver is pictured in the same photo making the two-fingered “peace” sign.
The ethnic Chinese family had reportedly left Penang by train on Saturday, travelling north through Thailand on a trip that was to culminate in a few days in the capital.
Mr Neoh’s 20-year-old son Neoh Jai Jun, a student at a university in Taiwan, had returned home to join them on the holiday, The
Star newspaper reported. He died in the explosion, along with Mr Neoh’s wife Lim Saw Gek, his son-in-law Lee Tze Siang and granddaughter Lee Jing Xuan.
Pictured in pink in the family photograph, the four-year-old is the youngest confirmed victim of the explosion so far. The body of Mr Neoh’s sister-in-law Lim Soo See has yet to be identified.
“We cannot believe four members of our family have been killed in the bomb blast. What was supposed to be a happy holiday has turned into a nightmare for all of us,” Mr Neoh’s brother Neoh Hock Bee, 48, said. “I pray the Thai police will capture those behind the attack. They should be punished severely.”
He said the remains of the four family members were to be flown home last night.
Thai authorities have said they are hunting a man shown on CCTV strolling into the packed shrine and leaving a backpack before the explosion occurred.
The shrine reopened yesterday with Buddhist monks leading prayers. An unidentified member of Mr Neoh’s family laid bundles of clothes at the shrine to represent their loved ones, a monk said.
Malaysian prime minister Najib Razak condemned the attack as a “heinous act” and said Thai prime minister Prayut Chanocha had assured him the perpetrators would be punished.