By Aaron Maasho
ADDIS ABABA(Reuters) - Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi accused Eritrea on Tuesday of abducting dozens of Ethiopian miners from the country's northwest, in a potential escalation of tension between the arch-enemies.
"They (Eritrean government) recently kidnapped more than 100 young miners who were mining gold in our country's northwest. And in the northeast, they killed some tourists and kidnapped others," Meles said, the latter referring to the January raid.
"We have taken proportional measures in both locations," he told lawmakers in response to a question on relations with Eritrea.
ADDIS ABABA(Reuters) - Ethiopian Prime Minister Meles Zenawi accused Eritrea on Tuesday of abducting dozens of Ethiopian miners from the country's northwest, in a potential escalation of tension between the arch-enemies.
Ethiopian troops
crossed into the Red Sea state last month and attacked what they said were
military bases used by rebels to stage raids, including a January attack that
killed five Western tourists in Ethiopia's remote Afar region.
These attacks
were the first on Eritrean soil that Ethiopia has admitted to since the end of
a devastating 1998-2000 border war, sparking concern that their unresolved
frontier spat could escalate into a full-scale war."They (Eritrean government) recently kidnapped more than 100 young miners who were mining gold in our country's northwest. And in the northeast, they killed some tourists and kidnapped others," Meles said, the latter referring to the January raid.
"We have taken proportional measures in both locations," he told lawmakers in response to a question on relations with Eritrea.
Meles did not
specify when and exactly where the abductions in the country's northwest Tigray
region took place, nor the measures his country had subsequently taken.
Eritrean
officials were not immediately available for comment, but they often dismiss
their rivals' allegations as a ploy to harm Eritrea's reputation.
Ethiopia
routinely accuses Asmara of supporting Ethiopian separatist groups. It blamed
an Afar rebel movement for the kidnapping of Westerners in its northern Afar
region in 2007, and again for the attack in the same area earlier this year.
Gunmen killed
two Germans, two Hungarians and an Austrian in a dawn attack on a group of
tourists in the remote Afar region on January 17, and seized two Germans and
two Ethiopians.
A rebel group in
the Afar region said in February it had freed the two Germans, although there
has been no official confirmation of the release.
After the border
war, the Hague-based Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission ruled that the
flashpoint town of Badme belonged to Eritrea but the village remains in the hands
of its neighbour, which is calling for negotiations to implement the ruling.
Asmara blames
the international community for the impasse, and President Isaias Afewerki last
month accused the United States of plotting the Ethiopian raids.
Ethiopia is Washington's
biggest ally in the Horn of Africa region and has deployed troops in lawless
Somalia to fight al Qaeda-linked insurgents in Somalia.
"The
military incursions were plotted by Washington with the aim of diverting attention
from implementing the boundary commission's decision," Isaias said in an
interview with state television.
(Editing by Yara
Bayoumy)
Source: Reuters
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