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“We can’t confirm if there are any hostages taken. But we believe he (the shooter) is still holding inside Terminal 21 shopping mall. We are working on this,” Lt. Gen. Thanya Kiatsarn on Saturday told CNN from the scene.
“At the moment we are trying to capture the guy,” police spokesman Col. Krissana Pattanacharoen said. “Both police and military forces have been deployed to the area.”
Hours after the rampage began, heavily armed officers led some people out of the mall, images posted to social media showed.
Police and someone believed to be the suspected gunman could be heard yelling at one another amid bursts of gunfire on video posted to social media. CNN could not independently confirm the authenticity of this video.
The manhunt was still underway about 5 a.m. local time Sunday, Col. Krittaya Laoprasobwattana, chief of Muang Nakhon Ratchasima police station, told CNN — about eight hours after the incident began.
News footage from the scene showed people leaving the area in pickup trucks and cars as security forces surrounded the mall.
The shooting happened in Nakhon Ratchasima Province, known as Korat.
Jon Fielding, an English teacher who lives in the area, told CNN that he was in the mall with a friend when people started running and shouting in panic.
“Everybody was running into the shops and restaurants and barricading the doors,” he said, adding that word spread of a mass shooting. “Everyone was really panicking. Everyone was looking through the glass trying to see what was happening exactly.”
Fielding said he was with a group of about 20 people who sought shelter in a dark kitchen in the back of a restaurant for five hours. He said the mall was packed and hundreds of people were trapped for hours before being evacuated.
“It’s a huge mall, really busy,” he said. “There must have been thousands of people in the mall.”
“Please be calm, find a safe place to hide and mute your mobile phones,” the nation’s Crime Suppression Division, part of the Thai police, tweeted to those stuck inside the mall, advising them to send their locations, the number of people with them and contact numbers to the police.
“A combined force of police and military has started their operation to evacuate people who have been stuck inside the building,” defense ministry spokesman Lt. Gen. Kongcheep Tantravanich said in a statement, adding that officers were doing their best to control the situation.
Facebook said in a statement that it had removed accounts of the suspected gunman. There was no evidence the suspect had posted violence.
“We are working around the clock to remove any violating content related to this attack,” the statement said. “Our hearts go out to the victims, their families and the community affected by this tragedy in Thailand.”
Thailand’s main telecommunications body reportedly has urged Thai broadcasters not to broadcast live footage from near the mall to avoid hindering security efforts.
The gunman’s motive wasn’t immediately known, Pattanacharoen said.
The suspect, Army Sub. Lt. Jakrapanth Thomma, is an ammunition battalion officer working for the 22nd Ammunition Battalion, defense ministry spokesman Lt. Gen. Kongcheep Tantravanich said.
“In general, any military (officer) would be good at guns, but this man certainly has more skills,” he said.
Shooter stole guns and a Humvee, official said
The gunman quarreled with his superior and ended up shooting and killing him, Kongcheep said. He then took the superior’s gun and went around shooting his colleagues. Aside from the superior, it wasn’t immediately known whether any military personnel were killed.
The soldier also stole guns, including at least one machine gun, and a military Humvee from his quarter. Tantravanich could not confirm the number of guns and ammunition taken.
After the shooter escaped from his quarter, he drove to the shopping mall and shot civilians along the way, Tantravanich said.
The bodies of the 20 people killed were at Maharat Nakhon Ratchasima Hospital, Deputy Prime Minister Anutin Charnvirakul said on Thai Public Broadcasting Service.
CNN’s Ray Sanchez and Ivan Watson contributed to this report.
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