A local TV
channel reports that riot broke out after Bangladeshi worker was hit and killed
by bus
The Guardian, Associated Press, Sunday 8 December 2013
A rare riot broke out in Singapore on Sunday night, apparently after a Bangladeshi worker in the Little India district was hit and killed by a bus, a local television channel reported.
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| Riot policemen watch burning vehicles during a riot in Singapore's Little India district. Photograph: Lianhe Zaobao/REUTERS |
A rare riot broke out in Singapore on Sunday night, apparently after a Bangladeshi worker in the Little India district was hit and killed by a bus, a local television channel reported.
Channel News Asia showed dramatic pictures of burning vehicles and people attacking the
windshield of a bus with sticks and refuse bins. It was not clear if anyone was
injured in the rioting that began late in the evening.
Such
violence is unheard of in Singapore, an orderly, modern city-state known for
strict punishments for crime and generally law-abiding citizens.
In a
statement, police confirmed that rioting took place but gave no details. It
only said officers were on the scene in Little India, an area popular among
Indian, Bangladeshi, Pakistani, Sri Lankan and Nepali expatriates.
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| Firemen douse a charred ambulance after riot breaks out in Singapore. Photograph: Roslan Rahman/AFP/Getty Images |
It has
scores of restaurants, grocery shops and a mall selling food and other items
for people from those countries. On Sundays, the area is especially crowded
with South Asian workers.
A witness,
Dharmendra Yadav, told Channel News Asia that at least two vehicles were on
fire, and rubbish and broken bottles were strewn on the streets. He said he and
many others were in a nearby Hindu temple attending a wedding when temple
officials received a call from the police asking that the gates be locked and
the guests stay inside until given clearance by the police.
He said a
short while later he heard a commotion in the street and bottles being thrown.
"We heard explosions. We also heard warnings from riot police," he
said.
The
situation was eventually brought under control but the guests were still not
allowed to leave the temple, he said.
Channel
News Asia said the riot apparently started after a Bangladeshi worker was hit
by a bus and killed. This could not be independently confirmed. No other
details were available.
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