ALUTGAMA: More deadly violence flared in a Sri Lankan coastal resort where Buddhist hardliners set shops and homes alight for a second night running in defiance of a curfew, police and residents said Tuesday.
Amid mounting international concern at the unrest, residents of a town which has borne the brunt said an unarmed security guard was killed in an attack outside a Muslim owned farm, raising the overall death toll to four.
More than a dozen houses and shops have been burnt overnight, a police source told AFP from the town of Alutgama after another night of mob violence by followers of the extremist Buddhist Force.
Western embassies in Colombo advised their nationals holidaying in the area to stay indoors, while other foreigners were urged to avoid crowded areas and respect the curfew.
In Welipanna, a suburb of Alutgama, residents said nine houses and 26 shops were destroyed overnight by a mob of 50 to 60 men armed with guns, petrol bombs and knives.
Local school principal, ARM Nahuman, said residents had pleaded with authorities to provide more police protection but to little avail.
There were only three constables and they were quite helpless in the face of the big mob, Nahuman told AFP, while showing the destruction.
Service station owner Abdul Kafar, 60, said the attackers fire-bombed his business as well as his home.
We have lost everything. We lived here for 25 years, but never experienced anything like this before, said Kahar as he stood among the charred remains of his home.
Farm owner Hijasin Mustapha, 31, said attackers set fire to his warehouse after stabbing an elderly unarmed security guard.
They first stabbed our watcher and another worker and then set fire to the stores, Mustapha said.
The attacks are the latest in a series of religious clashes to hit the island following unrest in January and also last year when Buddhist mobs attacked a mosque in the capital Colombo.
Muslims make up about 10 percent of the 20 million population, but are accused by nationalists of having undue influence.
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