Thai court sentences two men to death for 2015 Bangkok shrine bombing
A Thai court sentenced two men to death for the 2015 bombing at Bangkok's Erawan shrine that killed 20 people and injured 120 others.

A Thai court has sentenced two men to death for their involvement in the 2015 bombing at Bangkok's Erawan shrine that killed 20 people and injured 120 others.
The explosion occurred at the popular Hindu shrine in central Bangkok, one of the city's busiest tourist areas. The attack sent shockwaves through Thailand's tourism industry and marked one of the deadliest bombings in the country's recent history.
According to Reuters, the two defendants are Uyghur men, though specific details about their identities and the evidence presented against them were not immediately available from the court proceedings.
The Erawan shrine, located at a major intersection in Bangkok's commercial district, attracts both tourists and local worshippers. The bombing occurred during peak hours when the area was crowded with visitors.
The case has been working its way through Thailand's legal system for several years since the 2015 attack. Death sentences in Thailand are typically carried out by lethal injection, though executions are rare and often commuted to life imprisonment.
The sentencing brings a legal conclusion to one of Thailand's most significant terrorism cases in recent years, though the broader implications and motivations behind the attack continue to be subjects of ongoing investigation and analysis.