Angry mobs rampaged through Mandalay for a second straight night in the latest of several waves of sectarian unrest that have exposed deep religious tensions in the Buddhist-majority Southeast Asian nation.
Inter-communal violence has overshadowed widely praised political reforms since erupting in 2012. It has largely targeted Muslims, leaving at least 250 people dead and tens of thousands homeless.
Buddhist rioters, some armed with sticks and knives, attacked a Muslim teashop on Tuesday and surrounding property in downtown Mandalay after an accusation of rape, according to local police.
Unrest then broke out again late yesterday despite an increase in security, with pockets of violence flaring across the centre of the city of some seven million people.
"Two men were killed" in attacks late yesterday and into today, Zaw Min Oo, a senior police officer in Mandalay said.
He said one of the victims was Buddhist and one was Muslim. About 10 other people were injured.
In a monthly radio address, Myanmar's reformist President Thein Sein called for an end to religious hatred.
"As our country is a multi-racial and -religious nation, the current reform process will be successful only when stability is maintained through the co-operation of all the citizens by living harmoniously with one another," he said according to an official transcript.
The former general has been credited with pushing through dramatic reforms since the ex-junta handed power to a nominally civilian government in 2011.
But the sectarian conflicts have provided a major test for his administration and prompted warnings that the country's fragile transition towards democracy could be at risk.
Muslims in Myanmar account for an estimated four per cent of the roughly 60 million population.
Sectarian clashes flared up two years ago in western Rakhine state, with fighting that has displaced about 140,000 people, mainly stateless Rohingya Muslims.
Radical monks have been accused of stoking religious tensions with fiery warnings that Buddhism is under threat from Islam.
A prominent hardline monk, Wirathu, posted a link to online allegations against the teashop owners on his Facebook page just hours before the latest unrest flared up.
He has since posted only about Buddhist victims of the violence, ramping up the tension with allegations that Mandalay's mosques have issued a "jihad" with hundreds of people poised to launch an attack after receiving "military training".
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