It was not immediately clear what caused the explosion just before midnight yesterday at the 22-story Trader's Hotel in downtown Yangon. But the incident came after unidentified assailants planted several homemade bombs across the country in recent days, reportedly killing two people outside the city and injuring three others in Yangon on Sunday.
There was no visible damage to exterior of the hotel early today, but the explosion shattered part of one room on the ninth floor of the building, leaving shredded toilet paper, towels and a red purse scattered across the room's entranceway beside a broken wooden wardrobe door that had collapsed.
He said the blast occurred in or near the room's bathroom, and the woman's husband and two children were unhurt.
An American Embassy official confirmed that one American was injured and taken to a Yangon hospital, but gave no other details and declined to say whether the explosion was caused by a bomb.
A dozen police and soldiers with a sniffer dog entered the hotel. Later, many of them crowded into the destroyed room to inspect the damage. The room was blocked off with security tape, shards of glass littered the road outside.
But "because this is an active police investigation we cannot comment further at this time," he said. "The safety of our guests and staff are our highest priority and we are obviously monitoring the situation."
Small explosions occurred frequently when Myanmar was under 50 years of military rule, most often blamed on anti-government student activists or armed ethnic insurgent groups. But such incidents have become rare in recent years.
Myanmar has undergone rapid change since 2011, when the former army junta ceded power to a quasi-civilian government led by retired military officers.
Thein Sein's government has also struggled both to end a civil war with ethnic Kachin rebels in the north, and curb a rising wave of anti-Muslim violence that has killed hundreds of minority Muslims and displaced nearly 150,000 more in the predominantly Buddhist country since last year.
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