A Myanmar patrol boat opened fire on Bangladeshi fishermen, killing one, because it feared it was under attack, Myanmar state media said on Wednesday, in a report on the latest violence on the countries' troubled border.
A Bangladeshi security official said a complaint had been lodged over the early Monday shooting, the details of which were disputed by the two sides.
Their border has been unsettled since attacks on Myanmar border guard posts on October 9 in which nine policemen were killed. Myanmar blamed insurgents from the Rohingya Muslim minority.
A subsequent crackdown by Myanmar security forces has tested the already strained relations between the neighbours, who both see the stateless Rohingya as the other side's problem.
Bangladesh has complained about the new wave of refugees from Myanmar who have followed hundreds of thousands of Rohingya already in Bangladesh, having fled previous unrest and discrimination.
Almost 70,000 people have fled to Bangladesh since October 9, many giving accounts of extrajudicial killings, beatings, rape and arbitrary detention to UN investigators, journalists and human rights monitors.
The Myanmar government, led by Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi, has rejected the reports of abuse, saying many were fabricated. It insists strife in the area near the border with Bangladesh, where many Rohingya live, is an internal matter.
Bangladeshi police, residents and fishermen in the Bangladeshi district of Teknaf said fisherman Nurul Amin, 26, was killed when a Myanmar navy vessel approached his boat at speed in the Naf river which forms the border in that area.
The Myanmar boat chased the small wooden fishing boat toward the Bangladeshi bank of the river before opening fire, they said.
One fisherman was being treated for a bullet wound and another went overboard but swam to safety, said the sources, including Colonel Anisur Rahman, Border Guard Bangladesh commander for Cox's Bazar.


