Fourteen foreigners were among those killed in the attack, the
worst incident of its kind in Thai history. It dealt a fresh blow to
Thailand's important tourism industry, which had just begun to
recover after political protests last year.
Police escorted the two men to the shrine and a nearby shopping mall
in the Thai capital.
The men, handcuffed and wearing body armor, walked through the
re-enactment, a standard Thai police procedure, while bystanders
were kept at a distance.
National police spokesman Prawut Thawornsiri said on Friday one of
the two men was the same yellow-shirted man seen in security footage
placing a backpack at the shrine moments before the blast.
Prawut told reporters at the shrine on Saturday that the first
arrested suspect, who has been referred to both as Bilal Mohammed
and Adem Karadag, the name on a Turkish passport he holds, was
responsible for the bombing.
"We have now identified him as the one who killed 20 people and
injured many others," said Prawut.
Karadag, whose nationality remains unconfirmed, wore a yellow shirt
on top of his prison uniform and sat on a bench at the shrine during
the re-enactment - the same place the man seen in security footage
left the backpack containing the bomb.
The second man arrested, Yusufu Mieraili, used a mobile phone to
trigger the bomb, Prawut said without giving further details.
Mieraili, dressed in a dark blue shirt, went through his
re-enactment near a shopping mall a stone's throw from the shrine,
from where police say he detonated the bomb.
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Authorities had earlier said it was unlikely that either of the two
men detained over the Aug. 17 blast were the bomber in what has been
an often contradictory police investigation.
Police had also said they believed Mieraili conspired in the attack
but did not detonate the bomb.
Karadag's lawyer, who says his client's real name is Bilal Mohammed,
said Karadag maintains he is innocent and had last visited him on
Sept. 15.
"The appearance of the yellow shirt man [in CCTV footage] and Adem
do not match. I do not believe Adem would confess," lawyer Chuchart
Kanphai said.
The motive for the attack remains unclear.
(Additional reporting by Panarat Thepgumpanat and Jutart
Skulpichetrat; Editing by Paul Tait)
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