The UN said that Muslim homes have been targeted with "brutaEl efficiency" in deadly new unrest in Myanmar.
The UN said that Muslim homes have been targeted with "brutaEl efficiency" in deadly new unrest in Myanmar.
UN envoy, Vijay Nambiar, who has just been to the troubled country said on Tuesday that "incendiary propaganda" had been used to stir unrest between Buddhist and Muslim communities which has erupted again in recent days.
"It seemed to have been done, in a sense, in almost a kind of brutal efficiency," Nambiar told reporters at UN headquarters from Thailand.
He said he went to shelters in Meiktila where almost 9,000 people had sought protection. About 23 people have been detained in the town, which is about 130 kilometers (80 miles) north of the capital Naypyidaw, the envoy added.
"Most of the people I spoke to tended to suggest the attacks were perpetrated by people they did not really recognize, and they may have been outsiders. But clearly they were targeted," Nambiar said.
The envoy said some "insightful" articles had been written by Buddhist elements. "Clearly there has been a fair amount of incendiary propaganda which has been going on amongst the various communities, which heightened the feeling between them," Nambiar added.
The UN envoy has just been on a visit to Myanmar during which he met President Thein Sein and was taken to Meiktila where mosques were burned and charred bodies left in the streets in violence that started March 20.
Nambiar added that Thein Sein had been "very firm in saying that firm action" would be taken against the perpetrators and to stop the spread of the violence.
Since the attacks in Meiktila, the Buddhist-Muslim violence has spread this week to towns closer to the main city of Yangon.