Thai police investigating the Bangkok bombing said the fingerprints of a foreign man arrested at the border with Cambodia match those found on a bottle of bomb-making material.

Police also said they are seeking to arrest a Turkish man linked to the blast last month.

The new suspect, identified as Emrah Davutoglu, is the husband of a Thai woman for whom an arrest warrant has already been issued because she had rented an apartment where bomb-making materials were found at the weekend.

The woman has professed her innocence and said she is in Turkey. Of the eight people for whom arrest warrants have now been issued, at least two others are also believed to be Turkish.

National police spokesman Prawut Thavornsiri said authorities were still conducting DNA tests but could determine that the man arrested at the Cambodian border “is important and is related or conspired with people who committed” the August 17 bombing at the Erawan Shrine in central Bangkok.

The blast left 20 people dead, more than half of them foreigners, and more than 120 injured.

Thailand’s national deputy police chief, Chakthip Chaijinda, told reporters that he thinks the suspect arrested at the border speaks Turkish, which requires an interpreter. He did not say whether an interpreter has been brought in or if the Turkish Embassy has been approached.

The Turkish connection has fuelled speculation the suspects may be part of a group seeking to avenge Thailand’s forced repatriation of ethnic Uighurs to China in July. Uighurs are related to Turks, and Turkey is home to a large Uighur community.

The Erawan Shrine is especially popular with Chinese tourists, feeding the idea that it could be a target for people who believe the Uighurs are oppressed by China’s government.

Beijing says some Uighurs are Islamist terrorists, and that among them is a group that has been smuggled out of China to join Islamic State fighters in Syria.

We can confirm that the man’s fingerprints match with those found on a bottle that contains a bombing substance

In a later announcement, Mr Prawut said Davutoglu faces charges of conspiracy to possess unauthorised war materials. Mr Prawut said he is believed to have been “part of a network that provided accommodation” to those connected with the bombing.

Earlier this week, police issued an arrest warrant for his wife, Thai national Wanna Suansan, whose name was on the lease of an apartment that police raided over the weekend where bomb-making materials were found.

Wanna had told police that she had nothing to do with the bombing and wants to clear her name. Mr Prawut said that Wanna had agreed to come back to Thailand to be questioned by police but then said “she has to think about it”.

The investigation into the attack picked up after police raids this past weekend on two apartments on the outskirts of Bangkok that contained bomb-making materials.

In the first apartment, raided on Saturday in the Bangkok neighbourhood of Nong Chok, police arrested a suspect they described as a foreign man and seized bomb-making equipment that included detonators, ball bearings and a metal pipe believed to be a bomb casing.

The suspect arrested on Saturday had a Turkish passport, though Thai authorities said it was fake. At his apartment, they seized more than 200 passports, an unknown number of which appeared to be Turkish and possibly fake.

They also took fingerprints from the apartment, which turned out to match those of the suspect arrested on Tuesday at the border with Cambodia, Mr Prawut said.

“We can confirm that the man’s fingerprints match with those found on a bottle that contains a bombing substance,” Mr Prawut said. He added: “He could be the one who brought the bomb out of this apartment or he could have brought the bomb to the crime scene.”

Mr Prawut said that further testing, including DNA tests, were being conducted to bolster that theory.

Both suspects who have been arrested are being interrogated by the military and have not yet been formally charged.

When authorities announced the arrest on Tuesday of the suspect at the border, they described him as bearing a resemblance to a man spotted in surveillance video at the shrine who is believed to have planted the bomb.

The suspect seen in the video, wearing a yellow T-shirt, was carrying a backpack that he placed on a bench before leaving.

Sign up to our free newsletters

Get the best updates straight to your inbox:
Please select at least one mailing list.

You can unsubscribe at any time by clicking the link in the footer of our emails. We use Mailchimp as our marketing platform. By subscribing, you acknowledge that your information will be transferred to Mailchimp for processing.