Smoke rises from burning shops at a market set on fire by angry Sunni Muslims during clashes in Kohat, Pakistan, Monday. Authorities imposed curfews and deployed troops in two different areas of northwest Pakistan after three people were killed during a sectarian clash, police said. — AP DERA ISMAIL KHAN, Pakistan — Sectarian violence spread in Pakistan on Monday after clashes between minority Shiite and majority Sunni Muslims near the capital Islamabad prompted the government to impose a curfew and block mobile phone services over the weekend. Clashes confined to areas in and around the capital at the weekend spilled over on Monday into two towns in the volatile northwest. Tensions are high this month as Shiites mark Muharram, an annual period of mourning which has often sparked bouts of violence. Rawalpindi, a garrison city near Islamabad, remained under curfew and tight security for three days after a Shiite procession on Friday degenerated into sectarian clashes which killed at least eight people. On Monday, a mob set shops on fire in a predominantly Shiite district in the northwestern town of Kohat in clashes that killed a policeman and a civilian, police said. Tensions were high in the northwestern city of Hangu, also subject to a curfew, local media reported. The authorities imposed a mobile phone blackout on Rawalpindi, the seat of the Pakistani army, and parts of Islamabad over the weekend. The curfew was lifted only on Monday, but the city remained tense. The authorities imposed a curfew on Rawalpindi, twin city of Islamabad, which was only lifted on Monday morning. A ban on gatherings of more than five people remains in force. Troops were also deployed in Rawalpindi as well as in the southern Punjab city of Multan to keep the peace. Attacks on Pakistan's Shiites, who make up about a fifth of the 180 million population, have worsened in recent years. Most of the attacks are the work of Sunni extremists affiliated with banned groups, such as the Taliban or Lashkar-e-Jhangvi, which wants to drive all Shiites out of Pakistan. Hundreds of Shiites were killed in bombings and other attacks last year, including children gunned down on their way to school and doctors heading for work. — Reuters