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A foreign man holding a Turkish passport was arrested yesterday in Bangkok鈥檚 eastern suburbs in connection with the Erawan Shrine bomb attack.
A joint force of police and military officers made the arrest at Poon Anand Apartments in Nong Chok district.
READ: Thai police: Man in yellow shirt with backpack suspect in Bangkok blast | IN PHOTOS: Bangkok bombing |听鈥楢rab-like鈥 man seen leaving bag at Bangkok shrine before blast
A search of his rented apartment found a large quantity of materials used for making explosives, including ball bearings the same size as those used in the bomb at Erawan Shrine on August 17 and another bomb that went off near Sathorn Pier without causing casualties the following day.
Also found in the suspect鈥檚 room were fuses, short steel pipes with caps on both sides, and clothes with traces of explosive substances. A thorough search and examination of the suspect鈥檚 rented apartments continued until last night, a television report said.
鈥淲e believe that the suspect was involved with the bombing鈥 at the shrine, Royal Thai Police spokesman Lt-General Prawut Thavornsiri said on a live televised broadcast last evening. He also said the suspect 鈥渓ooks like the one we are looking for鈥.
Prawut said clothes and bomb-making material found in the detained man鈥檚 room were linked to the shrine attack as well as the blast at Sathorn Pier. 鈥淭he ball bearing is the same size鈥 as those found at the two blast sites.
About 100 police and military officers 鈥 including at least a dozen bomb disposal specialists 鈥 gathered outside the apartment block where the man was arrested in possession of bomb-making equipment and multiple passports.
Police and military personnel cordoned off the four-story budget apartment from scores of media and onlookers, and the arrested man could not be seen.
The blast at the city shrine was the worst ever. It killed 20 people dead injured more than 100 others.
The suspect, aged 28, holds a Turkish passport under the name Adem Karadag. According to the passport, he is from Istanbul. However, Prawut said the passport was fake.
The man was accompanied out of his apartment under heavy escort by troops and police, as many people gathered in the area after hearing about the arrest. The suspect was detained for questioning at an unspecified military camp.
Yesterday鈥檚 arrest was the first in connection with the Erawan Shrine bombing.
Police acted on a tip from the landlord who owned the apartment that the suspect was renting, according to a police source who declined to be named.
The landlord grew suspicious because the suspect did not speak Thai and rented five rooms on the same floor of the apartment building, since late July.
Local residents told reporters that the suspect had been living in the apartment for two weeks before the Erawan blast.
Deputy national police chief General Jaktip Chaijinda said it was 鈥渘ot yet clear鈥 whether the man is the same one in security-camera images taken on the evening of blast.
Police have been hunting for a prime suspect, described as a foreign man, who was captured on security cameras wearing a yellow t-shirt and leaving a bag at the shrine moments before the blast.
National police chief General Somyot Poompunmuang became obviously annoyed yesterday when a reporter asked him if the arrested man happened to be a scapegoat. He said such a question was 鈥渘ot constructive鈥.
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