This is the result of simmering ethnic violence in Myanmar.<br/> <br />A Muslim village burns to the ground, in a fire set by Buddhist neighbours.<br/> <br />It's part of tit-for-tat violence that has left 50 dead and displaced 30,000 people over the last several weeks.<br/> <br />On Sunday, Myanmar's most famous democracy advocate - Aung San Suu Kyi - met with Norway's foreign minister - Jonas Gahr Stoere - to discuss the clashes.<br/> <br />Stoere said the violence threatens what has been a dramatic shift to democracy by Myanmar's military leaders.<br/> <br />(SOUNDBITE) (English) NORWEGIAN FOREIGN MINISTER JONAS GAHR STOERE<br/> <br />"All violence and strife carry a risk much beyond the strife itself because it could topple a reform process which is always very vulnerable."<br/> <br />Suu Kyi - a former dissident who spent years under house arrest - is on her first European tour in decades.<br/> <br />On Saturday, she formally accepted a Nobel Peace Prize awarded to her in 1991.<br/> <br />Andrew Raven, Reuters
