NAIROBI, Kenya (AP) A blast in Ethiopia's capital over the weekend appears to have been an accidental detonation of explosives by two Somali militants who may have planned to attack a soccer game, a state TV report said Monday.
The report came amid heightened concern of attacks by al-Shabab, the Somali militant group that took responsibility for an attack on a mall in Kenya that killed dozens of people last month.
Sunday's blast at a home in Addis Ababa killed two people, both Somalis, state TV reported. The explosion affected a home used by personnel of the U.S. Embassy in Addis Ababa, an FBI document said. There did not appear to be any American casualties from the blast.
Ethiopia's anti-terrorism task force found a gun, grenades, explosives, a detonator and a belt at the home where the explosion took place, state TV reported. The jersey of Ethiopia's national soccer team was found at the site of the explosion, in what was perhaps an indication that the would-be bombers hoped to mingle among soccer fans of a game being played Sunday, the state TV report said.
No militant group has claimed any link to the explosion in Addis Ababa, but the area where it occurred hosts a large Somali population.