Malaysia
arrests six people, says they may have aided Bangkok bomber
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[September 23, 2015]
By Trinna Leong and Panarat Thepgumpanat
KUALA LUMPUR/BANGKOK (Reuters) - Malaysia
has arrested six people suspected of being part of a human trafficking
network and who may have helped a bomber who killed 20 people at a
Bangkok shrine last month escape from Thailand, police said on
Wednesday.
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The suspects joined two people already in Malaysian detention who
may have helped the bomber, who Thai police said was a foreigner of
unknown identity, flee across southern Thailand's border with
Malaysia, police in both countries said.
Four of the six people arrested last week were believed to be
minority Uighur Muslims, who come from China's far western Xinjiang
region, said Ayob Khan Mydin Pitchay, director of the Malaysian
police counter-terrorism unit.
Thai police have made two arrests over the Aug. 17 blast, Thailand's
worst ever bombing, that killed 20 people, including 14 foreigners,
seven from Hong Kong and mainland China.
The chief suspect is a man in a yellow shirt caught on security
camera footage leaving a backpack at the shrine. He was implicated
by a man in Thai detention who admitted to delivering the bag
containing the bomb to him, police say.
Ayob told Reuters the six were not directly linked to the bombing
but to a human-trafficking gang.
"We believe that they facilitated the movement of the yellow-shirt
man but we cannot confirm since it is an ongoing investigation,"
Ayob said.
Malaysia's arrests are the latest pieces in a puzzle pointing toward
a connection to Uighurs that Thai authorities have sought to play
down.
Thai police have ruled out a political motive linked to Uighurs for
the blast, suggesting instead the reason was that a human
trafficking gang was angered by a police crackdown.
A Thai police investigator who had just returned from Malaysia
confirmed the suspected bomber was not among the latest suspects,
who were likely part of the trafficking network.
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The Uighur issue could be a thorny one for Thailand and any
substantive link between the bombing and Thailand's forced
repatriation of 109 Uighurs at China's behest in July could result
in criticism that its foreign policy may have triggered the attack.
"They are not terrorists because they haven't announced what they
want," Thai police spokesman Prawut Thawornsiri told reporters on
Wednesday.
Thousands of Uighurs have tried to flee China saying they face
persecution, which Beijing rejects. Many use trafficking networks
through Southeast Asia to Turkey, where they are largely welcomed
and have ethnic and religious affinity.
Suspects believed to be Turkish and Thais living in Turkey are among
those on Thailand's wanted list for the bombing.
(Additional reporting by Pairat Temphairojana and Andrew R.C.
Marshall in Bangkok; Writing by Martin Petty; Editing by Simon Webb
and Robert Birsel)
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