Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

■ A man threw a grenade toward Ethiopia’s reformist new prime minister at a rally, killing one.

Ahmed unhurt, but explosion at huge rally kills one, injures 155

- By Elias Meseret

ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia — A man threw a grenade toward Ethiopia’s reformist new prime minister on Saturday, causing a deadly explosion at a massive rally in support of sweeping changes in Africa’s second most populous country. Nine police officials were arrested, state media reported.

Witnesses said the man threw the grenade at the stage as Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed waved to the cheering crowd of tens of thousands shortly after he made a strong appeal for unity following months of anti-government protests.

Addressing the nation minutes after he was rushed to safety, Abiy called the blast a “well-orchestrat­ed attack” but one that failed. He did not lay blame and said police were investigat­ing. At least one person was killed and 155 people were hurt, nine critically, Health Minister Amir Aman said.

“The prime minister was the target,” a rally organizer, Seyoum Teshome, said. “An individual tried to hurl the grenade toward a stage where the prime minister was sitting but was held back by the crowd.”

The man with the grenade was wearing a police uniform, witness Abraham Tilahun told the AP. Police officers nearby quickly restrained him, he said. “Then we heard the explosion.”

Nine police officials were arrested, including the deputy head of the capital’s police commission, state broadcaste­r ETV reported.

The attack was “cheap and unacceptab­le,” the prime minister said, and added: “Love always wins. Killing others is a defeat. To those who tried to divide us, I want to tell you that you have not succeeded.”

The ruling party in a statement blamed “desperate anti-peace elements” and vowed to continue with the country’s reforms.

The explosion in packed Meskel Square in Addis Ababa followed weeks of dramatic changes that shocked many in the East African nation after years of anti-government tensions, states of emergency, thousands of arrests and long internet shutdowns.

Ahmed, 42, took office in April and quickly announced the release of tens of thousands of prisoners, the opening of state-owned firms to private investment and the embrace of a peace deal with rival Eritrea. Ethiopians said they could hardly keep up with the pace of change.

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