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Sri Lankan extremists monks march to show support for Buddhists in Myanmar, in Colombo. Photo: AP

Sri Lanka arrests six in hunt for monks who attacked refugees

Sri Lankan police said on Sunday they have arrested six people in their hunt for a mob led by Buddhist monks who attacked Rohingya refugees last week.

The government of the Buddhist-majority country has accused the monks of behaving like “animals” during Tuesday’s attack on a centre housing Rohingya Muslims including children on the outskirts of Colombo.

“We have identified the monks who led the attack,” said an officer involved in the investigation on condition of anonymity. “We have deployed three teams to arrest them.”

Sri Lankan Buddhists march in a rally to show solidarity with Buddhists in Myanmar. Photo: AP

Two police officers had to be taken to hospital after the attack, in which monks and their supporters threw stones and smashed windows and furniture.

Five men and a woman have already been arrested and a government official said several police officers were also under investigation for failing to prevent the violence.

The refugees had arrived in Sri Lanka five months ago after the navy found them drifting in a boat off the island’s north coast.

Before that, they had lived in India for several years.

Hundreds of thousands of Rohingya Muslims have fled Myanmar in recent years and while most are in refugee camps in Bangladesh, some have moved to other parts of South Asia.

Sri Lankans protesters showing support for Myanmar prime minister Aung San Suu Kyi in Colombo, Sri Lanka. Photo: EPA

They have been the target of decades of state-backed persecution and discrimination in mainly Buddhist Myanmar, where many view them as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh.

Sri Lanka’s extremist Buddhist monks have close links with their ultranationalist counterparts in Myanmar. Both have been accused of orchestrating violence against minority Muslims in the two countries.

The UN High Commissioner for Refugees expressed alarm over Tuesday’s attack and urged Sri Lankans to show empathy for civilians fleeing persecution and violence.

The 31 Rohingya refugees, including 16 children and seven women, were moved by police to a former detention centre in the south of the island for their safety, according to the government.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Monks ‘behave like animals’ in attack on refugees
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