Ethiopia carries out 2nd attack in Eritrea

By Aaron Maasho, Reuters | March 17, 2012




ADDIS ABABA, March 17 (Reuters) – Ethiopian troops
carried out more attacks on rebels inside Eritrea on Saturday, a
government source said, a day after its neighbour called for
U.N. action over a similar incursion earlier in the week.

The attacks are the first on Eritrean soil that Ethiopia has
admitted to since the end of a 1998-2000 war that killed 70,000
people and left a border dispute unresolved. Eritrea says there
have been others.

“We’ve carried out further attacks on targets inside
Eritrea. This time it’s in the north section around Badme,” a
senior Ethiopian government official told Reuters on Saturday.

“We were once again successful. This strike was part of our
plan to take proportional measures that included the
(earlier)attacks in Eritrea’s southeast.” He did not specify who
had been targeted in the latest attack.

On Thursday Ethiopia said it had raided three military bases
inside Eritrea that it said were being using to train an
Ethiopian rebel group it blames for killing five foreign
tourists and kidnapping two others in its remote Afar region in
January.

Eritrea responded by saying it would not be “entrapped” by
the military incursion, signalling its determination to avert
another conflict with its bitter foe, and it called on the
United Nations to act against the aggression.

A spokesman for Ban Ki-moon said the U.N. chief urged both
sides to exercise “maximum restraint” and “respect each other’s
territorial integrity.”

The British government expressed concern about the earlier
incursion into Eritrea, saying it risked undermining efforts to
develop security and stability across the Horn of Africa.

A vicious row over the position of Eritrea and Ethiopia’s
shared border was not resolved at the end of the war.

The Hague-based Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission ruled
in 2002 that the border village of Badme belonged to Eritrea.
But the village remains in Ethiopia, Washington’s main ally in
the volatile Horn of Africa.

(Writing by James Macharia; Editing by Robin Pomeroy)


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