Tag: Tunisia

  • Terror Attacks In Three Continents

    Terror Attacks In Three Continents

    LYON/SOUSSE/KUWAIT CITY — Terrorists carried out attacks in Tunisia, Kuwait and France yesterday (June 26), leaving a bloody toll on three continents with at least 63 dead, and prompting new concerns about the spreading influence of jihadists.

    Tunisia was rocked by a brazen attack, when a gunman opened fire with his Kalashnikov at a beach resort in Sousse, killing at least 37 people, and wounding 36 others. He was killed by security forces.

    It was the second major terrorist attack on the country’s vital tourism industry this year.

    The Sousse attack comes after three Islamist gunmen killed more than 20 people, almost all of them tourists, in a mass shooting at the National Bardo Museum in Tunis in March.

    The motive and identity of the attacker were not immediately clear. But Tunisian authorities have struggled to suppress a small but violent hard-line Islamist insurgency that has sprung up in the years since the Arab Spring political upheavals in 2011.

    Meanwhile, the Islamic State claimed responsibility for an explosion at a Shiite mosque in Kuwait City. At least 25 people died and more than 200 were wounded in the suicide bomb attack.

    Worshippers were kneeling in prayer when the bomber walked into the Imam Sadeq Mosque and detonated explosives, destroying the walls and the ceiling. More than 2,000 people were praying in the mosque.

    After the attack, ISIS said in a statement posted on social media that it had targeted a “temple of the rejectionists” — a term it generally uses to refer to Shiites, whom it regards as heretics.

    A tiny, wealthy oil exporter, Kuwait has been largely insulated from the mayhem in the region, and open tension between Sunnis and Shiites is not common.

    But the assault in Kuwait City resembled others launched by ISIS recently on Shiite mosques in neighbouring Saudi Arabia, prompting many to believe that ISIS is seeking to incite a sectarian war between Sunnis and Shiites.

    The day of horror began in France, where a man stormed an American-owned industrial chemical plant in the town of Saint-Quentin-Fallavier near the city of Lyon, decapitated one person and tried unsuccessfully to blow up the factory. Two people were also injured during the attack.

    Speaking from a European Union summit in Brussels, French President Francois Hollande described the incident as a terrorist attack and said all measures would be taken to stop any future strikes on a country still reeling from Islamist assaults in January.

    France has been on high alert since January after attacks against the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, a kosher grocery store and a policewoman that left 20 people dead in the Paris region, including three Islamic extremist attackers.

    A car rammed the factory gate and ploughed into gas canisters, touching off an explosion. A decapitated body and flags with Arabic writing were found at the entrance. The severed head at the factory’s entrance appeared to be an echo of the Islamic State’s practice of beheading prisoners and displaying their heads for all to see.

    French security officials say the man whose severed head was found hanging at the gate of the factory has been identified as a local businessman, who might have been the attacker’s employer. He is believed to have been killed before the explosion.

    One of the attackers, who is known to French intelligence services and had links with Salafists – a fundamentalist doctrine within Sunni Islam, was arrested. His wife was also taken in by the authorities while authorities were questioning at least one other suspected accomplice.

    There was no immediate indication that the three attacks were coordinated. But the strikes came at roughly the same time, and just days after the Islamic State called for such operations during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.

    “It appears to be an effort to launch and inspire a wave of attacks across three continents, reminiscent of Al Qaeda’s simultaneous multiple attacks of the past,” said Bruce O Riedel, a former Central Intelligence Agency officer who is a counterterrorism expert at the Brookings Institution in Washington.

    “The Kuwait operation is especially dangerous, as this is the Islamic State’ first operation in a gulf state,” Mr Riedel said in an email the New York Times. “The others will be deeply alarmed,” he added, referring to member countries in the Gulf Cooperation Council.

    While investigations continued in each of the countries, the quick succession of the attacks raised the possibility that the Islamic State, which has seized control of territory in Iraq and Syria, has successfully inspired sympathisers to plan and carry out attacks in their own countries.

    “Muslims, embark and hasten toward jihad,” said the Islamic State’s spokesman, Abu Mohammed Adnani, in an audio message released earlier this week. “O mujahedeen (guerrilla fighters) everywhere, rush and go to make Ramadan a month of disasters for the infidels.”

    United States intelligence and counterterrorism officials were scrambling yesterday (FRI) to assess the connections, if any, between the attacks in France, Kuwait and Tunisia. Officials said that if the assessment found that the attacks were linked, officials would seek to determine whether the Islamic State had actively directed, coordinated or inspired them.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Gunmen Opens Fire At Tunisia’s National Museum, Several Tourists Dead

    Gunmen Opens Fire At Tunisia’s National Museum, Several Tourists Dead

    (Reuters) – Gunmen wearing military uniforms stormed Tunisia’s national museum on Wednesday, killing 17 foreign tourists and two Tunisians in one of the worst militant attacks in a country that had largely escaped the region’s “Arab Spring” turmoil.

    Five Japanese as well as visitors from Italy, Poland and Spainwere among the dead in the noon assault on Bardo museum inside the heavily guarded parliament compound in central Tunis, Prime Minister Habib Essid said.

    “They just started opening fire on the tourists as they were getting out of the buses … I couldn’t see anything except blood and the dead,” the driver of a tourist coach told journalists at the scene.

    Scores of visitors fled into the museum and the militants – who authorities did not immediately link to any extremist group – took hostages inside, officials said. Security forces entered around two hours later, killed two militants and freed the captives, a government spokesman said. A police officer died in the operation.

    The attack on such a high-profile target is a blow for the small North African country that relies heavily on European tourism and has mostly avoided major militant violence since its 2011 uprising to oust autocrat Zine El-Abidine Ben Ali.

    Several Islamist militant groups have emerged in Tunisia since the uprising, and authorities estimate about 3,000 Tunisians have also joined fighters in Iraq and Syria — igniting fears they could return and mount attacks at home.

    “All Tunisians should be united after this attack which was aimed at destroying the Tunisian economy,” Prime Minister Essid declared in a national address.

    The local stock exchange dropped nearly 2.5 percent and two German tour operators said they were cancelling trips from Tunisia’s beach resorts to Tunis for a few days.

    Accor, Europe’s largest hotel group, said it had tightened security at its two hotels in Tunisia.

    U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry joined leaders from Europe condemning the attack and said Washington continued “to support the Tunisian government’s efforts to advance a secure, prosperous, and democratic Tunisia.”

    Television footage showed dozens of people, including elderly foreigners and one man carrying a child, running for shelter in the museum compound, covered by security forces aiming rifles into the air.

    The Tunisian premier said 17 tourists were killed, including four Italians, a French citizen, a Pole, two Colombians, five Japanese, an Australian and two Spaniards. He had previous mentioned a German fatality, but did not mention that in later statements. Two Tunisians were killed.

    The museum is known for its collection of ancient Tunisian artifacts and mosaics and other treasures from classical Rome and Greece. There were no immediate reports that the attackers had copied Islamic State militants in Iraq by targeting exhibits seen by hardliners as idolatrous.

    Bardo’s white-walled halls set in the parliament compound are one of the most popular tourist attractions in the Tunisian capital. Many tourists come for day trips to Tunis from nearby Mediterranean beach resorts.

    Shocked but defiant, hundreds of Tunisians later gathered in the streets of downtown Tunis waving the country’s red and white crescent flag, and chanting against terrorism.

    “I pass this message to Tunisians, that democracy will win and it will survive,” President Beji Caid Essebsi said in a television statement. “We will find more ways and equipment for the army to wipe out these barbarous groups for good.”

    A MODEL OF COMPROMISE

    Tunisia’s uprising inspired “Arab Spring” revolts in neighboring Libya and in Egypt, Syria and Yemen. But its adoption of a new constitution and staging of largely peaceful elections had won widespread praise and stood in stark contrast to the chaos that has plagued those countries.

    After a crisis between secular leaders and the Islamist party which won the country’s first post-revolt election, Tunisia has emerged as a model of compromise politics and transition to democracy for the region.

    But the attack comes at a challenging time with Tunisia planning to reform its economy and cutback on public spending. Tourism represents around 7 percent of the gross domestic product.

    Security forces have already clashed with some Islamist militants, including Ansar al-Sharia which is listed as a terrorist group by Washington. But until Wednesday most attacks were in remote areas, often near the border with Algeria.

    Another group is holed up in the mountains along the Algerian border where the army has spent months trying to destroy their camps.

    Affiliates of Islamic State militants fighting in Iraq and Syria have also been gaining ground in North Africa, especially in the chaotic environment of Tunisia’s neighbor Libya, where two rival governments are battling for control.

    A senior Tunisian militant was killed while fighting for Islamic State in the Libyan city of Sirte over the past week. Security sources said he had been operating training camps and logistics.

    “An attack like this could strike the fragile transition in Tunisia, especially the tourism industry,” said local political analyst Nourredine Mbarki. “The problem is now these groups have gone from being in mountains and borders to hit the capital and targets with high security.”

    Wednesday’s assault was the worst attack involving foreigners in Tunisia since an al Qaeda suicide bombing on a synagogue killed 21 people on the tourist island of Djerba in 2002.

    The most recent attack on the tourism industry in 2013 when a militant blew himself up at the Tunisian beach resort of Sousse, but no one else was killed or wounded. Another bomber was caught at a presidential monument before he blew himself up.

     

    Source: www.reuters.com