Government spokesman says those detained have been trained by militants in Somalia and were planning series of attacks in Jimma.
ADDIS ABABA - Ethiopian police
arrested 25 people accused of plotting attacks in the country and
suspected of having links to Somalia's Al-Qaeda-linked Shebab rebels,
officials said Thursday.
Government spokesman Shimeles
Kemal said that those detained had been trained by the militants in
Somalia and were planning a series of attacks in Jimma, about 305
kilometres (189 miles) southwest of the Ethiopian capital and where the
arrests were made.
"About 25 people have been
apprehended on suspicion of organising an underground terrorist cell,"
he said, adding that "a number of weapons" were also seized and the
suspects likely to be charged.
Ethiopia, which shares a
1,600 kilometre border with Somalia, sent troops into the country in
2011 to help African Union and Somali defence forces fight the Shebab.
It currently has around 4,500 troops in the country and has spearheaded a
recent offensive against the Islamists.
Neighbouring
Kenya has been a frequent target of attacks by Shebab rebels, who have
demanded that Kenyan troops leave Somalia and claimed responsibility for
last year's attack on the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi that left
at least 67 dead.
Uganda and Djibouti, both contributors to the AU force in Somalia, have also been attacked by the Shebab.
The
US and British embassies have upgraded their travel warnings for
Ethiopia in recent weeks, alerting visitors and residents to an
increased threat of attacks.
Shimeles said while
Ethiopia "has been and will remain vulnerable to terrorist attacks," the
threat has not necessarily increased.
"I don't think that there is a special risk that warrants an extraordinary alert," he said.
Shebab
leaders have vowed to attack Ethiopia to avenge the presence of its
troops in Somalia, and last October two Somali nationals blew themselves
up while crafting a bomb in Addis Ababa, which police said they planned
to detonate at a crowded football match.
Source: Middle East Online
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