Heavy destruction in dam




Ethiopia on Wednesday that its forces foiled an armed attack was aimed at filling Nahdha in the northwest, and sources said an opposition group accused of harboring Eritrea behind the operation.
The Ethiopian Minister of State in the government liaison office Zadki Abraha told Anatolia that the security forces managed to thwart the sabotage attempt before the arrival of the perpetrators to the site of the dam.
The armed forces managed to kill 13 members of one of the banned opposition factions (which tried to carry out the subversive attempt) and arrested seven others who had fled to Sudan and were handed over to Ethiopia today.
The minister revealed that the armed group, which had explosives, RPG launchers and various light weapons, "was trained to carry out terrorist operations and kill the workers in the dam."
While the Ethiopian minister has not directly accused one party or entity of being behind the "subversive attempt," Eritrea has warned against continuing to support "terrorist" groups that are trying to destabilize and develop Ethiopia. He said that Al-Nahda Dam was a "red line" and that his country reserves the right to respond to those involved in the training and arming of terrorist groups.
The minister pointed out that investigations are under way with the seven detainees to reveal more details about the group "terrorist" and those behind it.
Earlier, well-informed sources in the Ethiopian government told Anatolia that the attack was addressed on Tuesday, and was launched by an armed group of the Movement "Qanbut Sabat" (Movement May 7) opposition banned Ethiopia accuses Eritrea of ​​harboring, which Asmara always denied.
This is the first time an attempt has been made to target the Nahdha Dam, which is being built on the Blue Nile near the Ethiopian border with Sudan. The Ethiopian government has tightened security around areas near the dam, and considered it a no-fly zone



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