50 dead since start of Myanmar unrest

0 comments

YANGON: Fifty people have been killed and scores wounded in communal clashes in western Myanmar, state media said Saturday, raising the toll from riots that have displaced more than 30,000 people.

 

According to state mouthpiece the New Light of Myanmar, 50 people have  died, with 54 injured between May 28 and June 14 in Rakhine state, which has  been rocked by violence between local Buddhists and Muslim Rohingya.
 
The report did not say whether the updated toll includes 10 Muslims beaten  to death on June 3 by a Rakhine Buddhist mob in apparent revenge for the rape  and murder of a woman, which sparked the violence.
 
A state of emergency was in force in Rakhine on Saturday with New Light  saying security forces were “restoring peace, stability and security” after the  unrest, which poses a serious challenge to Myanmar’s reform-minded government.
 
“Yesterday (June 14), there were only two riots in the state, and  authorities concerned could handle these two cases peacefully in accord with  respective law,” the report said.
 
Nearly 31,900 people from both sides are being housed in 37 camps across  Rakhine, officials in the state capital Sittwe said on Thursday, while  thousands of homes on both sides have been torched. 
 
Decades of discrimination have left the Muslim Rohingya stateless and  viewed by the United Nations as among the most persecuted minorities on the  planet.
 
About 800,000 Rohingya live in Myanmar, according to the UN, mostly in  Rakhine.
 
The Myanmar government considers the Rohingya to be foreigners, while many  citizens see them as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh and view them with  hostility.
 
The Buddhist Rakhine and Muslim Rohingya in the region have accused each  other of violent attacks, and in recent days local residents have been seen on  the streets wielding knives, swords and sticks.
 
Speaking in Geneva on Thursday where she began a historic trip to Europe —  her first since 1988 — opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi stressed “the need  for rule of law” when asked about the sectarian unrest. -- AFP

Leave Your Comment


Leave Your Comment:

New Straits Times reserves the right not to publish offensive or abusive comments and those of hate speech, harassment, commercial promos and invasion of privacy. Your IP will be logged and may be used to prevent further submission.The views expressed here are that of the members of the public and unless specifically stated are not those of NST.