March 13, 2006

Ethiopia says Eritrea behind bombings

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (Reuters) -- Ethiopia said on Sunday explosives used in a series of attacks in Addis Ababa last week were smuggled from Eritrea and Eritrean-backed "terrorists" were behind the blasts.

"Investigation on types and makes of explosives used in recent terrorist attempts confirmed that most of the explosions were carried out using a grenade known as C-4", said a police statement reported by state-run Ethiopian News Agency.

"Such type of grenades cannot be possessed by individuals and there are indisputable evidences that the grenades were smuggled into the country from Eritrea," it added.

Three explosions rocked Addis Ababa on Tuesday, wounding four people. There was no clear indication who was behind the attacks, which were similar to explosions in January that targeted public buildings and hotels in the Ethiopian capital.

The police statement said its investigation had shown "terrorists backed by Sha'abea (the Eritrean government) such as the Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) and other traitors were behind the terrorist plots perpetrated in the city during recent days".

The OLF is an opposition group fighting for independence in southwestern Ethiopia.

In Asmara, Eritrean presidential adviser Yemane Ghebremeskel dismissed the statement as "ridiculous".

"It is a total fabrication, it's groundless," he told Reuters.

The Ethiopian police statement said the blasts were intended to cause fear and cripple Ethiopia's development and democratization process.

The first explosion on Tuesday hit the Lalibella restaurant in front of the national stadium, badly damaging the structure.

The second destroyed a bookshop near the Mercato open-air market.

A third blast occurred outside the gate of a hotel and tourism training center, south of the stadium.

Tension between Ethiopia and Eritrea has been high since the end of a 1998-2000 war, which cost 70,000 lives, because the border between the Horn of Africa neighbors has not been fully demarcated.

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