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ETHIOPIA: Oromo rebels deny "annihilation" by government troops
[ This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
NAIROBI,
5 Jul 2002 (IRIN) - The rebel Oromo Liberation Front (OLF) on Friday
denied claims by the Ethiopian army that it had "completely
annihilated" separatist forces in the west of the country.
"This
is not the first time the Ethiopians have claimed total victory against
our forces," OLF spokesman Lencho Bati told IRIN. "Our forces are
intact."
He admitted that OLF troops had sustained casualties in
the fighting which has been raging in the Gambela region for the past
two months when the OLF launched an offensive in the area.
"Their blood will water the tree that will bear the fruits of freedom," Lencho added. "Our struggle will continue."
On
Thursday, Ethiopia's Major General Bacha Debele who commands troops in
the west, said the fighting was now over. He claimed that the army had
not been fighting the OLF as such but "groups of terrorists" which, he
alleged, had been trained and equipped by Eritrea to "infiltrate"
Ethiopia via Sudan.
"The joint action by the army and the
[local] people was aimed at eliminating the terrorists and not a fight
with the OLF," Bacha said, according to Ethiopian radio.
He claimed the "OLF mission" was sent by the Eritrean authorities "to bring the Ethiopian government to its knees".
Eritrea on Friday strongly denied any involvement in the fighting.
"The
state of Eritrea has nothing to do with internal war and civil strife
in Ethiopia," said Teweldemedhin Tesfamariam, Eritrea's deputy
ambassador to Kenya.
"The general should look for the problem
with his countrymen within his country, rather than trying to have it
logged onto Eritrea," he told IRIN.
"This is a deliberate
attempt on the part of the Ethiopian government to have the debacle of
its request for a correction of the boundary ruling clouded by
something sensational about imaginary Eritrean activities against it."
"I'm sure the world is too wise to be duped by this," Teweldemedhin added.
Last
week, the independent Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission (EEBC) in
The Hague rejected a request by Ethiopia for "interpretation,
correction and consultation" of the decision on border delimitation
between the two countries following their two-year border war.
OLF spokesman Lencho Bati, for his part, would not be drawn on whether his group was receiving help from Eritrea.
"The
OLF had a political relationship with the EPLF [Eritrean People's
Liberation Front] long before it became a government," he told IRIN.
"Our relations go back a long way. We are committed to bringing peace
and stability to the Horn region."
[ENDS]
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