BANGKOK -- Thai authorities arrested a foreign man Saturday they said had been holed up in a suburban apartment with bomb-making equipment and stacks of passports, the first possible breakthrough in the deadly bombing at a Bangkok shrine nearly two weeks ago.
All television channels broadcast a televised announcement Saturday evening on the suspect's arrest, which came 12 days after the bombing that authorities have called the deadliest attack in Thailand's modern history.
Police and soldiers raided the apartment in a nondescript concrete building on the outskirts of eastern Bangkok and found bomb-making materials that matched those used in the Aug. 17 blast at the Erawan Shrine in central Bangkok, police said.
The blast that killed 20 people and injured more than 120 was followed a day later by an explosion at a public ferry pier that caused no injuries but exacerbated concerns about safety in the Thai capital, which draws millions of tourists.
"Our preliminary investigation shows that he is related to both bombings," national police spokesman Prawuth Thavornsiri said in a statement, as he showed photographs of the suspect -- a young man with short brown hair and a light beard and mustache. Police identified him only as a 28-year-old foreigner, without releasing a name.
Photographs also were shown of what police seized, including detonators, ball bearings and a metal pipe police believe was intended to hold a bomb.
"The bomb materials are the same, similar or the same type" as those used in the bombings, police chief Somyot Poompanmoung said, adding the suspect had traveled in and out of Thailand since January 2014.
Police also found "a number of passports from one country," Prawuth said. He did not name the country but photographs shown during the broadcast showed stacks of passports similar to those from Turkey.
Earlier, Prawuth said authorities had not yet determined his nationality and dismissed Thai news reports saying he is Turkish. Images of a Turkish passport with the apparent suspect's picture were posted on social media.
"The passport you see is fake," said Prawuth, referring to the online photos. "We don't know if he is Turkish or not."
A Turkish government spokesman said he had no information on the suspect or any possible Turkish link to the attack. He spoke on condition of anonymity in line with Turkish government rules that bar officials from speaking to journalists without authorization.
Asked what could be the motive for the bombing, the police chief said "it's a personal grudge ... not international terrorism." He did not elaborate or give a clear explanation. The man faced charges of possessing unauthorized explosives, Prawuth said, without specifying a penalty. He was taken to a military base for further interrogation.
The blast at the Erawan Shrine was unprecedented in the Thai capital, where smaller bombs have been employed in domestic political violence over the past decade but not in an effort to cause large-scale casualties.
The shrine is a popular tourist destination, particularly with Chinese visitors, who are an important segment of the lucrative tourist market. At least six of the dead were from China and Hong Kong. It sits on the corner of a busy traffic intersection with a nearby overhead walkway in a neighborhood full of upscale shopping malls and five-star hotels.
Soon after the bombing, police released an artist's sketch of a man seen in a security camera video leaving a backpack at a bench then walking away from the open-air shrine. A separate camera showed the man, wearing a yellow T-shirt, on the back of a motorcycle taxi leaving the site.
The man seen in the video was believed to have carried out the bombing, which police said was likely planned by a group of people. They indicated in Saturday's news conference that the man arrested was not the bomber seen in the video.
"We believe he is a culprit in the same network. More details will be given later," Prawuth said.
No one has claimed responsibility for the blast, sparking a variety of theories into who might be behind it.
Possible suspects include parties seeking to avenge Thailand's forced repatriation of ethnic Uighurs to China. Uighurs are related to Turks, and Turkey is home to a large Uighur community.
Other theories included Muslim separatists from southern Thailand, opponents of Thailand's military government and feuding factions within the security services.
Police have been criticized for releasing conflicting statements and rapidly hosing down the crime scene at the shrine before all forensic evidence was recovered. Many accused authorities of rushing to clean up the bomb scene to reassure the public -- especially foreign tourists -- that security in the city was back to normal.
Police say they have been handicapped by low-quality and broken surveillance cameras and a lack of sophisticated image-processing equipment to clarify the fuzzy images in security videos, which were the only firm evidence they had.
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