Gemunu Amarasinghe/Associated Press
Mobs of young Buddhist men on motorcycles roamed the streets of Lashio,
Myanmar, on Wednesday, brandishing sticks and metal rods and throwing
rocks.
Published: May 29, 2013
BANGKOK
— Security forces on Wednesday struggled to bring peace to a northern
city in Myanmar after Buddhist mobs set fire to a mosque, a Muslim
school and shops, the latest outbreak of religious violence in Myanmar
and a sign that radical strains of Buddhism may be spreading to a wider
area of the country.
The violence occurred in Lashio, near the border with China, which is
hundreds of miles from towns and villages affected by religious violence
earlier this year.
A correspondent for The Associated Press who reached Lashio on Wednesday
reported that mobs of young men on motorcycles roamed the city
brandishing sticks and metal rods and throwing rocks. One was wearing
monk’s robes, The A.P. report said.
The
burning of the mosque and other buildings took
place on Tuesday evening and followed a pattern seen elsewhere in
Myanmar of the police and military units being unwilling or unable to
disperse angry crowds of Buddhists.
Lauri Nio, a student from Finland visiting Lashio, said the first police
units arrived two hours after groups of men set fire to a mosque and
began destroying shops. The police stayed for only a few minutes, he
said, and when a larger contingent of police and military units returned
later in the night, they closed off the streets but did not confront
the rioters.
Groups of men gathered in the market ‘'shouting, cheering and singing
Burmese nationalist songs'’ as they destroyed shops, he said.
Video footage from the city posted on Facebook on Wednesday by the
Democratic Voice of Burma, a Myanmar online news service, showed what
now have become familiar scenes in Myanmar of burned-out buildings and
charred motorcycles.
‘'We do not have information about casualties so far,'’ Ye Htut, a government spokesman, posted on his Facebook page.
Like a previous rampage in March in the central city of Meiktila, the
violence in Lashio appeared to have been touched off by a relatively
minor quarrel. State television said a Buddhist woman selling gasoline
was attacked by a Muslim customer, who was later detained by the police.
Buddhist mobs surrounded the police station where the man was being
kept and reacted with fury when the police did not hand him over.
Details of the quarrel could not be confirmed.
Mr. Ye Htut said the crowd that gathered outside the police station in Lashio included 80 Buddhist monks.
At least 44 people have died since March, when Buddhist mobs rampaged
through Meiktila, violence that followed a dispute in a gold shop
between a Muslim proprietor and Buddhist customers. Most of the victims
in Meiktila were Muslims.
Mr. Yet Htut said the authorities and religious and civic organizations
in Lashio were ‘'cooperating with each other to avoid further violence
in the city.'’
Muslims make up about 5 percent of the population but their presence is
visible in nearly every large town and city in the country. The violence
of recent months has strained Myanmar’s relations with Muslim countries
and has underlined questions about the ability of the Myanmar
government, which is overwhelmingly staffed by Buddhists from the Burman
ethnic group, to maintain long-term peace and stability among the
country’s many other ethnic and religious groups.
Wai Moe contributed from Yangon.