At Least 53 Dead in Clashes in Tunisia, Near Libyan Border

TUNIS, Tunisia (AP) —
A man walks past the bus that exploded Tuesday in Tunis, Wednesday Nov.25, 2015. Tunisia's president declared a 30-day state of emergency across the country and imposed an overnight curfew for the capital Tuesday after an explosion struck a bus carrying members of the presidential guard, killing at least 12 people and wounding 20 others. (AP Photo)
A man walks past a bus that exploded in Tunis, Nov. 25, 2015. (AP Photo)

Exceptionally deadly clashes between Tunisian forces and terrorist attackers left at least 53 people dead Monday near Tunisia’s border with Libya, the government said, amid growing fear that violence from Libya could destabilize the whole region.

Gunmen attacked the city of Ben Guerdane at dawn on Monday and fighting continued into the evening. Tunisia closed its border with Libya and the Tunisian interior and defense ministers traveled to the town to oversee the operation, according to a joint statement from their ministries.

The Tunisian government didn’t identify the attackers and no group claimed immediate responsibility, but two IS-affiliated websites said Islamic State group terrorists were engaged in the fighting.

“This is an unprecedented attack, planned and organized, and whose goal was probably to take control of this area and to announce a new emirate,” said Tunisian president Beji Caid Essebsi.

The attack left 35 terrorists, seven civilians and 11 members of Tunisia’s security forces dead, according to the joint government statement.

A 12-year-old girl was among those who were killed.

Libya’s chaos, five years after the uprising that led to the ouster and killing of longtime autocrat Muammar Gadhafi in 2011, has allowed the Islamic State group to take control of several cities. The divided country is ruled by two parliaments: an internationally recognized body based in the eastern city of Tobruk and a rival government, backed by Islamist-allied militias, that controls the capital, Tripoli.

Tunisia’s fledgling democratic government is especially worried about the IS presence in Libya after dozens of tourists were killed in terrorist attacks in Tunisia last year. IS terrorists claimed responsibility for those attacks, and Tunisian authorities said the attackers had been trained in Libya.

At dawn Monday, gunmen targeted a police station and military facilities in Ben Guerdane, Tunisian Interior Ministry spokesman Yasser Mosbah told The Associated Press. A night curfew has been ordered in Ben Guerdane until further notice.

The nearby tourist cities of Djerba and Zarzis were not affected by the violence, the statement said.

France’s foreign ministry condemned the attacks and identified the gunmen as “terrorists coming from Libyan territory.” ”This attack just reinforces the urgent need for a political solution in Libya,” the ministry said in a statement, adding that Tunisia was targeted because of its “exemplary democratic transition.”

Tunisia has been as a model of relative stability for the region since an uprising five years ago ushered in a democracy and unleashed Arab Spring protests across the region.

Tunisian forces have repeatedly clashed with extremists on the borders of Libya and Algeria in recent years, but Monday’s fighting was exceptionally deadly.

The Tunisian military sent reinforcements and helicopters to the area around Ben Guerdane and authorities were hunting several attackers still at large. Officials urged residents to stay indoors.

Last week, Tunisian security forces killed five heavily armed men in an hours-long firefight after they crossed into the country from Libya with a larger group. Tunisian security forces had been placed on alert based on “precise information” of possible border infiltrations following a Feb. 19 U.S. raid on an IS camp near the Libyan town of Sabratha, not far from the Tunisian border, the statement said.

Defense Minister Farhat Horchani said last week that German and American security experts were expected in Tunis on Monday to help Tunisia devise a new electronic video-surveillance system of its border with Libya.

 

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