Calm returned to Mandalay after the city was placed under curfew yesterday to quell violence that saw mobs wielding airguns, swords, rocks and other weapons go on a rampage, leaving one Buddhist and one Muslim dead.
It was the latest in a string of deadly religious clashes that have plagued the former junta-run nation for two years, prompting warnings that the country's fragile transition to democracy could be imperilled.
Violence broke out on Tuesday after an accusation of a rape of a Buddhist woman by two Muslim men from a local tea shop was spread on the Internet, prompting a crowd of hundreds to gather near the business, hurling stones and damaging property.
He said the situation was now under control and the government so far had no specific plan to tackle inflammatory remarks posted on the Internet.
Friends and relatives of the Buddhist man killed on Wednesday, a 36-year-old father of three, expressed their shock and outrage as they prepared to hold his funeral.
"He was like a brother to me," said Htwe, who was with the dead man on the night of the attack.
He showed AFP injuries on his hand that he said were slash marks from a "sword" used by a group of Muslims to kill his friend.
A funeral for the dead Muslim man, a popular local bicycle shop owner, was held yesterday, hours after he was killed while on his way to attend early morning prayers.
Kari Hasan, the head of nearby Shaeshaung mosque, said the Muslim community had become a target of hate speech and had been let down by the authorities.
"If something happens they suddenly say it is because of Islam. With the new government we expected good things but we only get bad things," he said.
Most of the victims of the violence have been Muslim and clashes have often erupted as a result of rumours or individual criminal acts.
Radical monks have been accused of stoking religious tensions, while the security forces have been accused of failing to prevent attacks.
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