Related: 9 Chinese workers killed by gunmen in Ethiopia, 7 kidnapped
ADDIS ABABA, April 29 (Xinhua) -- Ethiopian rebels
have released the seven Chinese oil workers kidnapped in a deadly raid on an oil
field in the eastern part of the country, an Ethiopian official told Xinhua on
Sunday.
"The seven Chinese workers have been freed after
negotiations with the rebels," said Bereket Simon, an advisor to Ethiopian Prime
Minister Meles Zenawi.
"They are still on their way to Jijiga. This is the
information that I have got at the moment," said Simon.
Jijiga is the capital of Somali state, where the
Chinese workers were kidnapped on Tuesday. Some 65 Ethiopians and nine other
Chinese workers were killed in the attack.
Ethiopia's Defense Ministry confirmed that the
Chinese hostages had been released.
As it was raining hard around the Jijiga area, the
Chinese workers might arrive at the city a bit later in the day, an official
from the defense ministry said.
The kidnappers, the Ogaden National Liberation Front
(ONLF), said they had handed the workers to the ICRC.
"We have released the Chinese at 2:00 p.m. (1100 GMT)
today to the ICRC (International Committee of the Red Cross)," Abderahmane
Mahdi, the London-based spokesman for the ONLF said.
The ICRC in Addis Ababa confirmed the rebels' words,
saying the Chinese workers had been handed over to them.
"I can confirm that they have been released," a ICRC
spokesman told reporters.
The Chinese staff worked for the Zhongyuan Petroleum
Exploration Bureau of the China Petroleum & Chemical Corporation.
The Chinese government condemned the attack and
demanded Ethiopia work to ensure the safety of Chinese personnel and property.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Liu Jianchao said
"the Chinese government strongly condemns this atrocious armed attack, mourns
for the Chinese and Ethiopian victims and expresses deep sympathies to their
families and those injured in the attack."
The ONLF, which formed in 1984 and operates in the
Ogaden region of the Somali State which borders with Somalia, took up arms
against the Ethiopian government in the early 1990s, demanding independence for
Ogaden.
Latest
report:
Bodies of nine Chinese workers killed in Ethiopia flown back
home
ZHENGZHOU, April 30 (Xinhua) -- The bodies of nine
Chinese victims of an attack on a Chinese oil company in Ethiopia were flown
back to their hometown, central China's Henan Province, on Monday morning.
The chartered plane of Air
China, carrying nine coffins each covered with white peonies, arrived at about
2:30 a.m. at the Xinzheng International Airport, nearly 40 km southeast of the
provincial capital of Zhengzhou. Full
story