A
 Myanmar court has sentenced seven Muslims to prison terms in connection
 with religious violence in March that left dozens of people dead, a 
justice official said. 
The defendants were sentenced on Tuesday and face imprisonment ranging from two to 28 years, sparing them the death penalty. 
They
 were accused of the murder of a Buddhist monk in the central town of 
Meiktila that sparked unrest across the region, mostly targeting 
Muslims. 
The
 main suspect received life imprisonment - equivalent to 20 years - and 
four more years for other charges, according to Ye Aung Myint, a 
government prosecutor in Mandalay region. 
One
 of the co-accused was handed 10 years for the murder, and 18 years for 
other crimes including arson and damage to public property. 
Family
 members of the accused broke down in tears at the court after hearing 
the verdict, Thein Than Oo, defence lawyer, said. "Whether they appeal 
depends on their relatives," he said. 
According
 to the government, at least 44 people were killed and thousands left 
homeless after the wave of violence, which was apparently triggered by a
 quarrel in a gold shop. 
Three Muslims including the gold shop owner were jailed for 14 years in April for assaulting a Buddhist customer. 
Sectarian fractures 
So
 far no Buddhists have been convicted in connection with the unrest in 
Meiktila, but Ye Aung Myint insisted that both sides were being treated 
equally. 
"We
 are sentencing people according to the law based on evidence presented 
at trial. We have no bias at all based on religion," he said. 
A total of 87 people have been arrested in the Meiktila area including about 38 Buddhists, he said. 
Attacks
 against Muslims - who make up an estimated four percent of Myanmar's 
population - have exposed deep fractures in the formerly junta-run 
country and cast a shadow over widely-praised political reforms. 
Some
 monks were involved in the clashes, while others have led a 
nationalistic campaign calling for a boycott of Muslim-owned shops. 
President
 Thein Sein, who sent the army to restore order, has vowed a tough 
response against those behind the violence, which he attributed to 
"political opportunists and religious extremists". 
It
 followed Buddhist-Muslim clashes in the western state of Rakhine last 
year that left about 200 people dead, mostly minority Muslim Rohingya 
who are denied citizenship by Myanmar. 
The
 verdicts come as rights group Physicians for Human Rights released a 
report detailing "horrific" violence in Meiktila targeting Muslims. 
It
 quoted eyewitnesses who described a Buddhist mob, including monks and 
assisted by the security forces, hunting down and killing at least 20 
children and four teachers from a Muslim school and injuring many more. 
Witnesses recounted seeing one student being decapitated and another being set on fire, according to the US-based group. 
                
                
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