The Borneo Post

Thai army detains several people over deadly blasts

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BANGKOK: Thailand’s army said yesterday it had detained several people for questionin­g over a wave of deadly bombings in some of the country’s best known-beach resorts that killed four people and wounded dozens, including tourists.

Last week’s blasts came days after Thais voted to accept a military-backed constituti­on that paves the way for an election at the end of 2017.

No group has claimed responsibi­lity, although police and the government have ruled out ties to foreign groups, linking the bombings to an unspecifie­d domestic issue.

Analysts say suspicion would inevitably fall on enemies of the junta aggrieved by the referendum results, or insurgents from Muslim-majority provinces in the south of the predominan­tly Buddhist country.

Several people are being held at army facilities, but none have been charged, military government spokesman Colonel Winthai Suvaree told Reuters.

“Ever since the incident on August 11, the army has used Article 44 to summon people who the state think can give useful informatio­n,” Winthai said.

The legislatio­n gives the

Ever since the incident on August 11, the army has used Article 44 to summon people who the state think can give useful informatio­n. Colonel Winthai Suvaree, military government spokesman

military government absolute power to take any steps needed to protect the public peace and detain people for up to seven days without a court warrant.

“They were sent to various army camps,” added Winthai, who declined to say how many were detained, although rights groups fear the number runs into the dozens.

“Nobody has been charged so far.

O n Sunday, a deputy national police chief said the attacks were carried out simultaneo­usly by one group on the orders of one person, but gave no further details.

Police on Sunday said they had arrested one person for arson but did not elaborate.

Over the weekend authoritie­s defused at least five explosive devices that had failed to detonate.

Three bombs went off in the Muslim-majority province of Yala late on Sunday, but nobody was injured, police said.

Defence minister Prawit Wongsuwan said last week’s blasts were ‘definitely’ not related to the southern insurgency, although some involved might have come from the region.

“It is definitely not an extension of the deep south insurgency,” Prawit told reporters on Monday. “But it is possible they could have been hired from there.

For more than a decade, Thailand has been divided between populist political forces, led by former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra and the royalist and military establishm­ent.

They accuse Thaksin, toppled in a 2006 coup, of corruption and nepotism, charges he rejects. His sister Yingluck, who took power after a 2011 election win, was ousted in a 2014 coup.

Fears that Yingluck and Thaksin could be blamed for orchestrat­ing last week’s attacks prompted a denial by their party. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Members of a bomb squad unit inspect the scene following two roadside bomb blasts at separate locations by suspected separatist militants in the Bacho district of Thailand’s restive southern province of Narathiwat. — AFP photo
Members of a bomb squad unit inspect the scene following two roadside bomb blasts at separate locations by suspected separatist militants in the Bacho district of Thailand’s restive southern province of Narathiwat. — AFP photo

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