THE death toll after ethnic clashes in India’s remote northeast rose to 54 on Saturday, with fresh violence overnight despite authorities rushing in troops to restore order.
Thousands of soldiers were sent to Manipur state after a protest march by a tribal group turned violent on Wednesday.
Authorities imposed an internet blackout and issued shoot-at-sight orders in “extreme cases” in an effort to contain the unrest.
The situation remained tense after a fresh bout of violence on Friday night, hours after the state’s top police officer warned that rioters had stolen arms and ammunition from police stations.
Hospital morgues in the state capital Imphal and Churachandpur district further south had reported a combined total of 54 dead, according to local media.
“16 bodies were kept in the morgue of the Churachandpur district hospital while 15 bodies were in Jawaharlal Nehru Institute of Medical Sciences in Imphal East district,” Press Trust of India news agency reported, citing an unnamed local official.
“The Regional Institute of Medical Sciences at Lamphel in Imphal West district reported 23 dead.”
Manipur director general of police P. Doungel told reporters Friday that security forces were bringing the situation under control.
Army patrols had “gone a long way to quell the thing off”, he said.
But he added that some police stations had been overrun by “miscreants” who stole arms and ammunition, and issued a public appeal for their return.
Security forces and the Manipur government have yet to issue an official death toll for this week’s violence.