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African News

Ethiopia Blames Eritrea for Attack

Wednesday, April 25, 2007 4:47:44 PM
By ANITA POWELL

An  ambulance leave Bole International airport, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, Wednesday, April 25, 2007. Some of the ambulances were carrying Chinese workers who were injured in Tuesday's attack in Jijiga, Ethiopia.  Ethiopia blamed longtime enemy Eritrea Wednesday for an attack on a Chinese-owned oil exploration field that killed 74 people, escalating the dangerous brinksmanship between the neighboring countries. At least six Chinese workers and a number of Ethiopians were also taken hostage during Tuesday's dawn attack, for which the rebel Ogaden National Liberation Front had claimed responsibility. The secessionist group is formed from Ethiopia's minority Somalis, has been linked to Eritrea and has had combatants fighting alongside Muslim insurgents in Somalia. (AP Photo/Anita Powell)ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) - Ethiopia on Wednesday blamed its rival Eritrea for an attack on a Chinese-owned oil exploration field that killed 74 people, raising tensions between the neighbors who have yet to resolve a border issue following the end of a two-year war in 2000.

The rebel Ogaden National Liberation Front, which has been linked to Eritrea in the past, claimed responsibility for Tuesday's attack, which killed 65 Ethiopians and nine Chinese. At least six Chinese workers also were kidnapped, said Xu Shuang, general manager of Zhongyuan Petroleum Exploration Bureau's Ethiopia operation.

The rebels, ethnic Somalis who have been fighting for independence since 1984, have warned against any investment in eastern Ethiopia that could benefit the U.S.-allied government.


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