A foreign suspect arrested over last month's horrific Bangkok attack has confessed to delivering a bomb to the man wearing a yellow t-shirt thought to be the bomber.
Scene at the unprecedented attack in Bangkok, Thailand. Photo: AP
A foreign suspect arrested over last month's horrific Bangkok attack has confessed to delivering a bomb to the man wearing a yellow t-shirt thought to be the bomber, local paper The Nation reported on September 7.
Accordingly, Yusufu Mieraili, whose nationality remains unconfirmed, said he bought bomb-making materials on the internet, made a bomb and delivered it to another man, who was seen on security footage wearing a yellow t-shirt and placing a rucksack under a bench at Erawan shrine moments before the blast. He did all these at the direction of a man called ‘Izaan’, who was believed to have left Thailand on August 16.
Mieraili also said Izaan was the person who issued orders to the bomber and another man wearing a blue t-shirt suspected to be the bomber in the August 18 incident.
Yusufu Mieraili, caught in Sa Kaeo, a province sharing border with Cambodia, on September 1, also admitted to a charge of possessing explosives, national police spokesman Prawut Thavornsiri told reporters.
The same day, Thai police issued two new arrest warrants for a foreign man of unknown nationality called Abdullah Abdullahman and an unnamed foreigner in connection with the Erawan shrine bombing.
The explosion at the Erawan shrine in a busy shopping district on August 17 took at least 20 lives, including many foreign tourists.-VNA
Thai authorities are seeking a local woman suspected of being involved in the deadly Bangkok blast after bomb-making materials were discovered in her rented apartment.
Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha announced on September 1 that a suspect believed to be behind a deadly bomb attack on a shrine in central Bangkok in August has been arrested.
Thai police detained Kamarudeng Saho, a Thai national, suspected of involvement in the deadly bomb attack at Erawan Shrine in Bangkok that killed 20 people and injured 120 others on August 17.
Thai police on September 4 said it is likely that neither of the two foreign men detained after the deadly attack at Erawan Shrine in Bangkok last month were the main culprits in the bombing.
One of the two men arrested over the bombing at the Erawan shrine in Bangkok last month admitted to possessing explosives, Thai police said on September 7.
The Republic of Korea (RoK), China and Japan agreed on May 3 to reinforce the regional financial safety net, along with members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), by launching a new financing facility programme meant to extend greater support in case of a financial crisis.
A technical issue combined with an extreme heatwave was blamed for a series of explosions at a military base that killed 20 soldiers and injured several others in Cambodia on April 27, the country’s Ministry of Defence said in a May 2 statement as reported by the Xinhua news agency.
The Customs Department of Thailand is scheduled to commence the collection of value-added tax (VAT) on imported goods sent via postal services, regardless of the goods value, starting in May.
A lecturer from Chulalongkorn University’s Faculty of Medicine has warned Thais to be more vigilant against COVID-19, saying infection rates appeare to be worsening with higher hospital admissions, deaths and severe cases.
Malaysia should harness the collective expertise and resources to drive sustainable growth and development of the halal industry, according to Minister of Investment, Trade and Industry Zafrul Abdul Aziz.
Laos has officially restored the 10% value-added tax (VAT) rate starting May 1, in a bid to support the country’s budget revenue and socio-economic development.
The ASEAN Future Forum 2024 (AFF 2024) entered its second plenary session in Hanoi on the afternoon of April 23, discussing ways to ensure comprehensive security for the people-centred ASEAN Community.
The first session of the ASEAN Future Forum 2024 (AFF 2024) in Hanoi on April 23 focused on fast and sustainable growth for the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN).
The Canada-ASEAN Business Council (CABC) and the ASEAN Alliance on Carbon Markets (AACM) have signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to strengthen collaboration and accelerate the implementation of carbon crediting programmes across Southeast Asia.
ASEAN Secretary-General Kao Kim Hourn reaffirmed ASEAN leaders' commitment to empowering the youth to unleash their full potential when he had a dialogue with ASEAN youth in Hanoi on April 22 on the sidelines of the ASEAN Future Forum (AF 2024).
The Thai Government is being urged to increase the proportion of renewable power generation to more than the target of 50% set in the power development plan (PDP).
The Centre for Volcanology and Geological Hazard Mitigation (PVMBG) of Indonesia on April 21 lifted its tsunami advisory issued previously following the eruption of Mount Ruang in Sitaro district of North Sulawesi province.
Thailand expects to export about 1 million tonnes of durian, valued at an estimated 130 billion THB (3.53 billion USD) this year, with most of the shipments to China, according to Minister of Agriculture Thammanat Prompao.
The 72nd meeting of the ASEAN Working Group on Intellectual Property Cooperation (AWGIPC) and related meetings are being held by the Ministry of Science and Technology’s Intellectual Property Office (IPO) of Vietnam in the central city of Da Nang on April 22-26.
Enhancing regional food security and tackling the pressing challenges of climate change will be key agendas defining Malaysia’s ASEAN Chairmanship in 2025, Speaker of the Dewan Rakyat (lower house) Johari Abdul told the press on April 19.