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Curfew Declared as Riots Erupt in Burmese City
MARCH 20, 2013— Authorities have imposed a curfew in central Burma's Meikhtila city
after two people were killed and 20 others injured in riots triggered by a quarrel in a
Muslim goldsmith's shop in the city's main bazaar, according to police and
hospital sources.
Several shops in the bazaar were destroyed or burned down in the riots Wednesday believed
to involve hundreds of residents in the city, located on the banks of Lake Meikhtila in
Mandalay division, the sources said.
A 26-year-old male driver, identified as Than Myint Naing, and an unidentified monk were
confirmed dead in the clashes, which broke out around 10:00 a.m. in the goldsmith shop, a
city police officer told RFA's Burmese Service.
Police said at least one mosque was destroyed in the violence, some of the worst since
ethnic clashes last year between Rohingya Muslims and Buddhist Rakhines in Rakhine state
left at least 180 dead and thousands homeless.
It was not immediately clear whether the clashes in Meikhtila city were between Muslim and
Buddhist communities.
"The fight began after a villager and his wife tried to sell a golden hair pin at the
goldsmith's shop," a police source said.
"An argument broke out over the price offered and the shop owner beat the customers,
causing an uproar in the bazaar as the news of the argument spread quickly," the
source said.
The villager was wounded and his sympathizers burned the goldsmith shop, according to the
source.
Rights activists criticized the local police for standing idle as the riots broke out.
"According to witnesses, riot police just stood by as the clashes took place,"
said Min Ko Naing, a member of the 88 Generation democracy movement.
He asked whether some officials in charge of security turned a blind eye to the clashes in
an attempt to create disorder and pave the way for a return to military rule.
"I guess there are people who do not want to see stability. We cannot afford to have
military rule again," he said, referring to the decades of harsh rule under the
previous military junta which gave up power two years ago to the nominally civilian
government of President Thein Sein.
Reported by RFA's Burmese Service. Translated by Khin Maung Soe. Written in English by
Parameswaran Ponnudurai.
View this story online at:
http://www.rfa.org/english/news/burma/riots-03202013191111.html
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