Curfew in Mandalay after Buddhists mobs go on a rampage
Attacks erupt after rumours a Muslim man raped a Buddhist woman in the worst ethnic violence Myanmar's second-largest city has seen
Myanmar's second-largest city was put under curfew yesterday after two people were killed in the latest outbreak of Buddhist-Muslim violence to convulse the former junta-ruled nation.
Dozens of armed police were seen patrolling the tense streets of Mandalay, where shops were closed after angry mobs rampaged through the city for two consecutive nights.
Two men, one Buddhist and one Muslim, were killed in violence that continued into yesterday morning.
One victim was identified as a Muslim man, said U Tin Aung, a Muslim official who was arranging his funeral. Residents said the man was believed to have been on his way to a mosque before dawn on Thursday when he was attacked by the mob and left dead in the street.
The second fatality was a Buddhist, according to a police officer who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to media. Details of his death were being investigated.
Myanmar, a predominantly Buddhist nation, has been grappling with sectarian violence since 2012 that has left up to 280 people dead and another 140,000 homeless, most of them Muslims attacked by extremist Buddhists. Most of the violence has taken place in western Rakhine state.