Thursday, November 7, 2013

Breaking: Four killed in bomb blast as Ethiopia raises security alert


ADDIS ABABA (Reuters) – Four people were killed when a bomb blast tore
 through a minibus in western Ethiopia late on Tuesday, at about the same time
that the government warned of imminent attacks by militants, an official said.
The official, speaking to Reuters on Wednesday, said nobody had claimed responsibility
 for the blast.
Addis Ababa put its security forces on heightened alert on Tuesday night after
 receiving strong evidence that Somalia’s Islamist al Shabaab group was plotting assaults.
It was not clear whether the blast occurred before or after that warning.
“The bomb exploded on Tuesday inside a minibus travelling in Segno Gebeya,”
 government spokesman Shimeles Kemal said, referring to a region bordering Sudan.
“No one has claimed responsibility yet. The case is under investigation.”

Full ETV Report on the Bomb Blast that killed four people


The warning came three weeks after officials said two Somali suicide bombers accidentally
blew themselves up while preparing for an attack on football fans during Ethiopia’s
World Cup qualifying match against Nigeria.

Al Shabaab has warned Ethiopia of revenge attacks for deploying troops inside Somalia
to fight the al Qaeda-linked militants, alongside African Union forces from Uganda,
Burundi and Kenya.
The National Intelligence and Security Service also urged the public on Tuesday to
 inform police if they encountered “suspicious” activity, and urged hotel staff and
 private landlords to verify the identity of visitors.
Al Shabaab gunmen killed at least 67 people in September when they raided a
mall in the neighbouring Kenyan capital of Nairobi.
Addis Ababa says it has foiled several attacks in the past few years planned by domestic
rebel groups and Somali insurgents.
There have also been sporadic explosions in recent years. Thirteen people were wounded
when an explosive device ripped through a bus in the north in 2010, while a bomb
explosion near a court in the capital injured two in 2011.
(Reporting by Aaron Maasho; Editing by Edmund Blair and Hugh Lawson)
Source, Dire Tube

No comments:

Post a Comment