This Article is From Mar 08, 2016

Tunisia Hunts Jihadists After Deadly Raid Near Libya Border

Tunisia Hunts Jihadists After Deadly Raid Near Libya Border

Tunisian security forces pressed a search for jihadists near the Libyan border.

Tunis, Tunisia: Tunisian security forces pressed a search for jihadists near the Libyan border today after a deadly raid the authorities described as an "unprecedented" assault by the ISIS.

Prime Minister Habib Essid said around 50 extremists were believed to have taken part in Monday's coordinated attack on an army barracks and police and National Guard posts in the border town of Ben Guerdane.

He said that 36 attackers had been killed and seven captured in a fierce battle that also saw the deaths of seven civilians and 12 security force personnel.

Essid told a news conference that the militants "murdered one internal security force member in his own home".

He said three civilians and 14 security personnel were also wounded.
Interior ministry spokesman Yasser Mesbah said the search for any militants still at large was continuing in the border area.

He said a nighttime curfew imposed in the town after the attack had been well respected and that the situation was "stable".

On Monday, Essid said that the operation's aim had been to create a "Daesh (IS) emirate" in Ben Guerdane.

President Beji Caid Essebsi said the "unprecedented" jihadist attack was "maybe aimed at controlling" the border region and vowed to "exterminate these rats".

Residents told AFP the assailants appeared to be natives of the region.

They stopped people, checked their ID cards apparently to seek out members of the security forces, and announced their brief takeover of Ben Guerdane as "liberators".

It was the second deadly clash in the border area in less than a week as Tunisia battles to prevent the large number of its citizens who have joined ISIS in Libya from returning to carry out attacks at home.

Two deadly ISIS attacks on foreign tourists last year that have dealt a devastating blow to Tunisia's tourism industry are believed to have been planned from Libya.

Jihadists have taken advantage of a power vacuum in Libya since the NATO-backed overthrow of longtime dictator Moamer Kadhafi in 2011, to set up bases in several areas, including Sabratha between Tripoli and the Tunisian border.

(This story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)
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