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Tunisia at war after unprecedented attacks by Takfiri militants
Tunisia’s president says his country is at war after "unprecedented" attacks by Takfiri militants and ensuing clashes leave at least 53 people dead near the Libyan border. “This is an unprecedented attack, planned and organized. Its goal was probably to take control of this area and to announce a new emirate,” President Beji Caid Essebsi said of the Monday raid. Prime Minister Hassid Essid said the attack was an attempt by Daesh militants to carve out a stronghold on the border. Gunmen attacked the city of Ben Guerdane at dawn Monday, triggering fierce fighting with the Tunisian army which continued past nightfall. Corpses lay in the street and gunmen hid in homes as darkness fell, gunfire sporadically ringing out, according to residents. The clashes prompted Tunisian interior and defense ministers to travel to the town to oversee the operation.
Officials said 35 attackers, seven civilians and 11 members of security forces were killed. Authorities sealed off the nearby beach resort town of Djerba, a popular destination for tourists, and imposed a night curfew in the town. They also closed two border crossings with Libya. Tunisian forces have repeatedly clashed with Takfiri militant on the borders of Libya and Algeria in recent years, but Monday's fighting was unusually bloody. The relative calm in Tunisia has been punctured by growing instability in Libya which has plunged into chaos since former dictator Muammar Gaddadi was ousted in 2011 after a NATO military intervention. France, a key player in the NATO intervention, condemned Monday's attack and identified the gunmen as "terrorists coming from Libyan territory."
President Essebsi said the nation is "unconditionally united" as he praised Tunisian armed forces. "They are at war against this barbarism, against these rats, that we will eradicate with God’s will,” he said. No group has so far claimed responsibility for the attack but two Daesh-affiliated websites said the terrorist group’s militants were engaged in the fighting. In June 2015, a man armed with a rifle killed 38 people, mostly foreign tourists, on a beach in the Tunisian resort town of Sousse. The attack came more than a month after two militants stormed the Bardo Museum in the capital and shot dead 21 people and injured 44 others, mainly foreign tourists. Last week, Tunisian security forces killed five heavily armed men who had sneaked into the North African country from Libya.
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