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F
787 - 28/05/07 -
Regional
president Abdullahi Hassan suffered a leg wound during Monday's attack, Bereket
Simon, special adviser to Ethiopia's Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, told Reuters.

ADDIS
ABABA, May 28 (Reuters) - A grenade tossed into a crowd in Ethiopia's volatile
Somali region on Monday wounded the local president and several other people celebrating
a national holiday, officials said.
The
government quickly blamed the attack on the Ogaden National Liberation Movement
(ONLF), separatist rebels who have been increasingly active in the remote east
and last month attacked a Chinese-run oil exploration field killing 74.
An
ONLF spokesman denied involvement.
Regional
president Abdullahi Hassan suffered a leg wound during Monday's attack, Bereket
Simon, special adviser to Ethiopia's Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, told Reuters.
"One
hand grenade was thrown at the stadium this morning. A number of people were also
seriously wounded. We have no deaths confirmed at the moment," he said.
Aid
agency sources said the attack happened as hundreds of people were gathered at
the stadium in Jijiga town's Revolutionary Square for a ceremony marking the overthrow
of Ethiopia's former dictator Mengistu Haile Mariam.
The
country's Somali region has been the scene of a sporadic but long-running conflict
between government forces and the ONLF, which wants more autonomy for the remote
and under-developed area bordering Somalia.
Tensions
mounted sharply in April when ONLF fighters killed 65 Ethiopians and nine Chinese
oil workers in the raid close to Abole, a small town 75 miles (121 km) south of
Jijiga.
Adurahmin
Mohammed Mahdi, a London-based ONLF spokesman, said his movement had nothing to
do with Monday's attack.
"Our
policy is not to attack civilian targets or Jijiga," he told Reuters. "The
ONLF attacks military targets only."
Aid
agency sources say government troops recently stepped up operations in three districts
covering about half the region.
The
sources, who asked not to be named, said aid workers now had to apply for permission
to enter the affected region -- a restriction they said was delaying vital development
work.
A
three-person New York Times reporting team was detained in the region, interrogated
at gunpoint and held for five days before being freed last week without charge,
the newspaper said.
Bereket
said he had no information on any restrictions in the Somali region.
Islamists
who ruled southern Somalia for the second half of 2006 were on good terms with
the ONLF, but the relationship suffered when allied Ethiopian and Somali government
troops ousted the Islamists over the New Year.