- Muslims protest a photo of a partially burned Quran on Facebook
- The account of the Buddhist boy tagged in the photo is deleted
- Bangladeshi Muslims also recently protested against the online film "The Innocence of Muslims"
(CNN) -- Crowds of angry Muslims attacked Buddhist shrines, torching some of them, over the weekend in Bangladesh to protest after a photo of a partially burned Quran was posted on Facebook, police said Sunday.
The protesters chanted anti-Buddhist slogans, blaming the burning of the Muslim holy book on a Buddhist boy, district police superintendent Saleem Jahangir said.
The boy is tagged in the photo but did not post it himself, Jahangir said. The boy's account has been deleted and police are not naming him.
Police sent extra officers to restore calm in Cox's Bazaar, a town south of the capital Dhaka on the coast, said Jahangir.
"Now the situation is under control," he said.
The south Asian nation is about 90% Muslim, the Pew Forum on Religion & Public Life estimated in its 2011 survey of the global Muslim population.
It is less than 1% Buddhist.
Actual or reported Quran burning has led to violence in Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Relatively peaceful Bangladesh was one of many countries that saw demonstrations recently against the online video "The Innocence of Muslims," which portrays the prophet Mohammed as a womanizer and child abuser.
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