Thailand bomb attack
© Munir Uz Zaman/AFP/Getty Images A Thai police officer at the site of a blast in Hua Hin on Thursday night.
A string of explosions early on Friday rocked Thai resort towns of Surat Thani and the earlier attacked Hua Hin, where dozens of foreign tourists had been targeted. At least two people have reportedly been killed and "many" injured in the new spate of violence.

One of the blasts took place outside Surat Thani police station on Friday morning, following festivities dedicated to the Queen's Birthday / Mother's Day celebrations in Thailand.

Wongsiri Promchana, governor of Surat Thani province, was cited by AFP as saying that the explosive device was planted in a flowerbed near the marine police station and killed a local municipal employee.


Another explosion rocked the Loma Park area, located on Phuket Island, popular with tourists, the Sydney Morning Herald reports. Reports are coming of a second explosion on Patong's beach road, also near a police station.

One explosive device was then defused by police in Phuket.

"A bomb was planted in the Loma beach area," a law enforcement source said, as cited by TASS.

Three new blasts rocked the resort of Hua Hin, killing one person and injuring at least four others early Friday, according to local media reports. On Thursday, two earlier blasts hit the resort, killing a woman and injuring over 20 people.

Police said they have arrested first suspects linked to the blasts, Sputnik news agency reported.

Thai authorities published a list of 10 foreigners injured in Thursday's blasts in Hua Hin, including Austrian, UK, Dutch, German and Italian nationals.


"The victims are being treated in three of Hua Hin's hospitals," said a local law enforcement source.

In the wake of multiple bomb attacks on Thursday and Friday, Thai Prime Minister Prayut Chan-o-cha ordered the tightening of security in the most vulnerable tourist areas.

"The PM has issued emergency orders to the relevant agencies in the areas to prevent other bombing incident from happening again, increase the security in the crowded areas," said government spokesman Maj-General Sansern Kaewkamnerd, as cited by Thailand's The Nation.

He noted that at the moment it is too early to draw conclusions on who could be behind the attacks, calling on the citizens to alert police on anything they deem suspicious.

A major fire engulfed the department store in the southern Trang province. The store's security guard reportedly heard the sounds of blasts and smelt smoke coming from the Leemart superstore on Friday morning, according to the Nation. The firefighters are trying to contain the fire. The store was reportedly closed at the moment of the incident. On Thursday, a town market in Trang was bombed, killing one and injuring seven others.

Two bombs went off in another southern Thai province, Phang Nga, on Friday, local TV reported, citing Thailand's permanent secretary of the Interior Ministry.