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Protesters beating an accused (C) of raping a woman, after dragged out of district jail in Dimapur, Nagaland on Thursday. Image Credit: PTI

New Delhi: Authorities in a northeastern Indian city said on Friday they had imposed a round-the-clock curfew, a day after a rape suspect was pulled out of jail and lynched by a mob and another man was killed in the subsequent police firing.

The suspect, who stood accused of raping a woman multiple times and was arrested in late February, was dragged out of the prison in Dimapur city in Nagaland state before being beaten to death and strung up to a clock tower on Thursday.

“A 25-year-old youth suspected to be part of the mob was injured in police firing, who later succumbed to his injuries at the hospital,” Meren Jamir, superintendent of police in Dimapur, said.

He said police were “trying to bring the situation under control”.

Tensions had been rising in the district since February 24 when police arrested the alleged rapist over the assault of a 19-year-old tribal woman.

Nagaland Chief Minister TR Zeliang said the suspect was a Bangladeshi immigrant, and Jamir said his killing had been followed by attacks on Bangladeshi-owned businesses.

Nagaland’s indigenous tribal groups have for years accused the growing population of Bengali-speaking Muslims from nearby Bangladesh of illegally settling on their land and eating into their resources.

Jamir said the situation was “very tense”, but they were trying to “restore order”, with hundreds of riot police personnel patrolling the streets.

An inquiry was also under way over the prisoner’s killing, Zeliang said.

“The curfew will continue until the situation improves. We will do whatever possible to stop any escalation,” he said.

The violence comes as India is in the middle of a raging controversy over a government order to ban the broadcast of a documentary, Storyville: India’s daughter, about the December 2012 gang rape of a young student.

The incident, which sparked outrage both within India and around the world, highlighted the frightening level of violence against women in the world’s second most populous country.