People ride past a digital billboard showing a sketch of the main suspect during last Monday’s attack on Erawan shrine, in Bangkok, yesterday.
Bangkok: Authorities yesterday urged patience in their hunt for the Bangkok shrine bomber, as the police chief admitted Thailand lacks some of the “modern equipment” to find the prime suspect captured on security cameras.
Anxiety is mounting six days after the attack, which killed 20 people in the capital’s commercial heart, with the bomber still on the run.
The hunt has so far focused on a suspect in a yellow T-shirt seen on CCTV placing a rucksack under a bench at the Erawan shrine minutes before the blast. A sketch of the man has been widely circulated and a bounty of more than $300,000 has been offered for his arrest.
He is described on his arrest warrant as “foreign” but police have since said he could in fact be Thai or of mixed race.
Unverified footage, time-stamped just a few minutes after last Monday’s blast, shows a second man in a blue T-shirt kicking a package into water near a bridge in the same spot where a device exploded last Tuesday without injuries. But police have not publicly linked the two blasts despite pressure to reveal more.
He did not reveal the equipment the police need but it is likely to be facial recognition technology or programmes to enhance security camera footage. Earlier in the week junta chief Prayut Chan-O-Cha bristled at suggestions his government should seek overseas help in a complicated inquiry, with several nations offering their expertise.
It is not clear if any offers have since been officially accepted. Despite their technical limitations, police say the investigation is progressing, but they accept that the main suspect could have left the country.
With no-one claiming responsibility, rumours and speculation have swirled in Thailand over the country’s worst single mass-casualty attack in living memory.
AFP