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World / Asia-Pacific

Death toll in Myanmar sectarian violence up to 112

(Agencies) Updated: 2012-10-26 18:48

KYAUKTAW, Myanmar - The number of people killed in six days of unrest in western Myanmar reached at least 112 on Friday as security forces used deadly force to break up the worst sectarian violence between Buddhists and Muslims in years.

Death toll in Myanmar sectarian violence up to 112

A man, who was injured in the recent violence, is treated at a hospital in Kyuktaw township October 25, 2012. Hundreds of homes burned and gunfire rang out as sectarian violence raged for a fifth day between Rohingya Muslims and Buddhists in western Myanmar on Thursday, pushing the death toll to more than 120 and testing the country's nascent democracy. Picture taken October 25, 2012. [Photo/Agencies]

The United Nations warned that Myanmar's fledgling democracy could be "irreparably damaged" by the clashes, which come just five months after communal unrest killed more than 80 people and displaced at least 75,000 in the same region

Ethnic Buddhist Rakhines told Reuters they were shot by security forces struggling to impose order on Rakhine State, where violence with Rohingya Muslims has engulfed several districts, including Kyaukpyu where a multibillion-dollar China-Myanmar pipeline starts.

The escalating death toll, which has doubled from Wednesday, severely tests the reformist government's ability to contain historic ethnic and religious tensions suppressed during nearly a half century of military rule that ended last year.

"The fabric of social order could be irreparably damaged and the reform and opening up process being currently pursued by the government is likely to be jeopardised," a spokesman for UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said in a statement that described the violence as "deeply troubling".

"The widening mistrust between the communities is being exploited by militant and criminal elements to cause large-scale loss of human lives."

Win Myaing, information officer of Rakhine State government, said 112 people, including 61 women, had been killed and 72 had been wounded as of Friday.

At least 2,000 houses and eight religious buildings had been destroyed by Wednesday, according to a statement from the president's office issued late on Thursday.

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