Kuwait Times

Suicide attackers hit outside US embassy

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TUNIS: Suicide attackers struck outside the US embassy in the Tunisian capital on Friday, killing a police officer, wounding six other people and once again shaking a city repeatedly hit by jihadist violence. The latest attack came despite a state of emergency imposed in the North African nation in 2015 following a string of bloody assaults claimed by the Islamic State group. The noon explosion rocked the Berges du Lac district hosting the highly fortified embassy, causing panic among pedestrian­s and motorists. “Two individual­s targeted a security patrol... in the street leading to the American embassy,” the interior ministry said in a statement.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity. Police at the scene said the assailants drove to the area on a motorcycle and detonated their explosive devices as they were approached by officers at a roundabout near the embassy. The two attackers died and one officer, 52-year-old father of three Lieutenant Taoufik Mohammed El Nissaoui, died of his wounds. Five more injured officers and a lightly wounded female civilian were in a stable state, Interior Minister Hichem Mechichi told journalist­s.

“It was a homemade explosive device and we are looking for those who helped make it,” he said. Local media reported police raids on two working-class neighborho­ods in northern Tunis. Anti-terrorism prosecutor­s have opened an enquiry, spokesman Sofiene Sliti said, but no arrests had yet been made. DNA tests were underway to identify the attackers, he said, adding that a large quantity of explosives was used. “All security units are on high alert,” the interior ministry said.

After Friday’s blast, police sent reinforcem­ents and forensic experts to the area, where body parts were strewn across the ground. A helicopter buzzed over the Berges du Lac, a district protected round-the-clock by security forces. “It’s tough to have to go on working when your colleagues have been wounded,” said one police officer at the scene. Office worker Haykel Boukraa spoke of widespread panic. “Our office is 300 meters from (the blast scene), but the explosion was so loud that the windows in our building shook,” the 49-year-old told AFP. “There was total panic.”

Earlier police had said one of the two assailants had tried to enter the embassy but was prevented by police. But interior ministry spokesman Khaled Ayouni said that “the police patrol was targeted, rather than the embassy”. He noted that the attack took place the day before the fourth anniversar­y of a 2016 attack in the town of Ben Guerdane, which killed 13 security forces and seven civilians. US ambassador to Tunisia Donald Blome praised authoritie­s for their “immediate protection” of the embassy. A senior State Department official who returned from Tunisia to the US on Thursday said that despite the attack, the country has been increasing­ly effective in fighting violent extremism. —AFP

 ??  ?? TUNIS: Police and forensic experts inspect the scene of an explosion near the US embassy in the Tunisian capital on Friday. —AFP
TUNIS: Police and forensic experts inspect the scene of an explosion near the US embassy in the Tunisian capital on Friday. —AFP

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