Eritrean rebels say killed 17 intelligence agents
By Tesfa-Alem Tekla
MEKELE, Ethiopia (Reuters) - An Eritrean rebel group said on Wednesday it had killed 17 intelligence agents in a strike against a government increasingly painted as a pariah state by African and Western powers.
"Our fighters on Monday attacked a camp belonging to the 28th sub-division and killed (or) wounded 37 government intelligence members," Yasin Mohamed, spokesman for the rebel Red Sea Afar Democratic Organisation (RSADO) told Reuters.
"After the strike we took control of the military camp for over 4 hours and we counted 17 bodies, all belonging to a government intelligence unit."
There was no immediate comment from the Eritrean government and the report could not be independently confirmed.
The U.N. Security Council accuses Asmara of providing funds and weapons to Islamist insurgents in Somalia where violence has killed 21,000 people since the beginning of 2007. The council slapped sanctions on Eritrea last December.
Eritrea has repeatedly denied the allegations and accuses Washington and arch-foe Ethiopia of fabricating lies.
The two Horn of Africa neighbours have had long running hostilities and tensions simmer along their common border due to a dispute over the frontier.
Relations have been at an impasse since they fought a 1998-2000 war in which at least 70,000 people were killed. Continued...
