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BANGKOK, March 9 (Xinhuanet) -- A homemade tubelike
detonator exploded beside a security box in front of the residence of Thai Privy
Council's Chairman Prem Tinsulanonda in central Bangkok on Thursday afternoon,
injuring two foreigners and causing minor damage.
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| Thai forensic police inspect the
scene of a bomb blast outside the house of former Prime Minister Prem
Tinsulanonda in Bangkok March 9.
(Xinhua/AFP) | The blast
occurred at 2:05 p.m. local time (0505 GMT) near a security box outside Prem's
house compound in Bang Lamphu district in Bangkok. A policeman at the scene told
Xinhua that the bomb was laid under a stone chair which was burst into pieces
after the blast.
Some police dynamite experts sampled the metal relics
of the bomb and said it was something like a homemade percussion cap.
"The bomb which blasted today is the same kind of the
two bombs which exploded in Bangkok during the last two months," a
plainclothesman said.
Fung, a shopkeeper whose store is just in front of
the blast scene, said a few stone pieces were burst into her shop.
"I was doing some cleaning in the shop when I heard
the huge sound. It just like an earthquake and some stone pieces flied into the
front-yard of my shop," Fung said. "And then I saw two foreigners, a man and a
woman, sat on the ground beside the security box of Prem's residence."
Initial investigation identified the injured as a
Briton and a Canadian. A spokesman of Vajira Hospital identified the Briton as
Jeffeny King, 28, who was passing the house at the time of the blast. He was
injured by shrapnel in his left shin.
Three cars were also damaged in the explosion, police
said.
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| A Thai forensic police collects
evidence at the scene of a bomb blast outside the house of former
Prime Minister Prem Tinsulanonda in Bangkok March 9. (Xinhua
photo) | Police closed the four-lane road in front of the
scene half an hour after the blast and then some soldiers from Thai Royal Army
marched into the residence.
"Some passers-by witnessed a man in his twenties rode
a bike around the residence for several times and the police are hunting the
suspicious person now," a security man guarding the closed gate of the residence
said.
Another police officer said he believed the blast was
related to recent political chaos in Thailand. He thought the group behind the
blast wanted to make more confusion for the situation because "Prem plays an
important role between the political side and the royal side."
Prem, a former army commander-in-chief who was prime
minister between 1980 to 1988 and currently Privy Council chairman to Thai King
Bhumibol Adulyadej, was in his residence when the bomb exploded. He said after
the blast that he "never knows why to be the bomb target."
Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra, who was on the
election campaign tour in Chanthaburi, said he had not received an official
report on the bomb yet but he believed someone was trying to create a situation.
He said police would try to find out the masterminds
of the bomb and bring them to justice.
The embattled caretaker prime minister is facing, on
one hand, a strong pressure from anti-Thaksin middle-classed groups, led by the
People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD), to force him to step down following his
family's sale of Shin Corporation shares to Singapore's Temasek Holdings in late
January and, on the other hand, an overwhelmed support by pro-Thaksin groups who
are mostly people of the grassroots level and want him to remain in office.
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