March 25, 2013
CNN
Phyo Wai Lin, Jethro Mullen and Kocha Olarn
Yangon, Myanmar -- Residents of the city in central Myanmar where clashes between Buddhists and the Muslim minority killed dozens of people last week struggled to resume their daily lives on Monday with a state of emergency still in place.
Even as an uneasy calm prevailed in Meiktila, the city at the heart of 
the unrest, police reported fresh arson attacks on Muslim properties in 
other areas, showing the challenges Myanmar authorities face in reining 
in communal tensions in this nascent democracy. 
A group of Buddhists on Saturday night torched 65 houses and religious 
buildings in Yemethin Township, which is about 40 kilometers south of 
Meiktila and not under a state of emergency, according to Lt. Col. Aung 
Min, a spokesman for the Myanmar Police Force. 
And on Sunday night, smaller outbreaks of arson took place in other towns further south, including Okpo and Tatkon, he said.
The attacks over the weekend caused property damage, but didn't result 
in any deaths, Aung Min said. That contrasts with the violence in 
Meiktila last week, which killed at least 32 people, according to the 
New Light of Myanmar, a state-run newspaper. 
In the Meiktila clashes, which were reportedly set off by a dispute 
between a Muslim gold shop owner and two Buddhist sellers, rioters set 
fire to houses schools and mosques, prompting thousands of residents to 
flee their homes. 
State of emergency 
As the violence threatened to spiral out of control, authorities 
declared a state of emergency on Friday, which allows the military to 
help reinstate order. 
Police confiscated weapons such as swords and machetes from groups of 
Buddhists -- some of them monks -- who were roaming the streets, 
officials said. 
As authorities began to clear up after the mayhem, they found more than 
20 bodies so badly burned they couldn't be identified, the New Light of 
Myanmar reported. 
The newspaper said Sunday the unrest had left 8,707 people living in 
temporary shelters such as a soccer stadium and a monastery in Meiktila,
 a lakeside city about 130 kilometers north of the administrative 
capital, Naypyidaw. 
But Win Htein, an opposition member of parliament for the area, on 
Monday gave a higher estimate for the number of people displaced by the 
unrest, saying 10,000 Muslims and 7,000 Buddhists had been driven from 
their homes. 
"We are facing the problem of not having enough food and blankets," he said. 
At the same time, he said, the overall situation in the city had improved,with shops starting to reopen. 
Win Htein had said last week that he believed that most of those killed in the violence were Muslims. 
Police have detained a total of 36 people in relation to the recent clashes in Meiktila and other towns, Aung Min said Monday. 
Concerns after previous unrest 
The United Nations and the United States have both expressed concern 
about the recent violence in Myanmar, which is emerging from decades of 
military repression and has taken a number of significant steps toward 
democracy in recent years under President Thein Sein. 
The sudden boiling over of tensions between Buddhists and Muslims in 
central Myanmar follows sectarian troubles that killed scores of people 
in the west of the country last year. 
Those clashes, in Rakhine State, took place between the Buddhist majority and the Rohingya, a stateless ethnic Muslim group. 
Most of the victims in that unrest were Rohingya. Tens of thousands more
 were left living in makeshift camps, and many of them have since joined
 those who attempt each year to flee to Thailand and Malaysia in flimsy 
boats. 
Journalist Phyo Wai Lin reported from Yangon, CNN's Kocha Olarn 
reported from Bangkok, Thailand, and CNN's Jethro Mullen reported and 
wrote from Hong Kong.
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