Myanmar: New clashes between Rohingya Muslims, Buddhists
Headlines 04:30
Yangoon, October 25: New clashes between Muslims and Buddhists have broken out in volatile western Myanmar, leaving at least two people dead and more than a thousand homes burned to the ground, authorities said on Wednesday.
The information ministry said the violence was continuing and authorities were trying to restore law and order.
The unrest, which began Sunday night, is some of the worst reported between Rohingya Muslims and ethnic Rakhine Buddhists since skirmishes swept the region in June, displacing about 70,000 people.
Rakhine state Attorney General Hla Thein said the latest violence began in Minbyar township, about 25 kilometres north of the state capital, Sittwe.
It later spread farther north to Mrauk-U township. Both areas are remote, reachable only by foot, Hla Thein said.
Authorities imposed a dusk-to-dawn curfew in the townships yesterday, Hla Thein said.
He said both areas were calm Tuesday, but the Information ministry announced later in the day that the violence was continuing.
Hla Thein said one Buddhist man and two Muslim women died in Sunday's riots, but the ministry put the death toll at two a man and a woman.
It said 531 houses from six villages in Minbyar and 508 houses in two villages in Mrauk-U had been destroyed in arson attacks.
The unrest comes four months after members of the two religious groups turned on each other across Rakhine state in June after the alleged rape and murder of a Buddhist woman by three Muslim men in late May. That violence left at least 90 people dead and destroyed more than 3,000 homes and dozens of mosques and monasteries.
The two groups are now almost completely segregated in towns such as Sittwe, where the Rakhine are able to roam freely while the Rohingya are mostly confined to a series of camps outside the city center.






