Times of Oman

UK warns of more attacks as country’s Tunisia toll is 15

British police have sent forensic experts and detectives to Tunisia to help identify victims and gather evidence

- When a legal permit is issued it is absolutely wrong for other bodies to intervene when they have no legal right to do so. If the judiciary wants to act in this regard it should have legal justificat­ion Hassan Rouhani, President, Iran

LONDON: Three members of the same family were among at least 15 Britons killed in the Tunisia attack, reports said on Sunday, in Britain’s worst loss of life in a terror incident since the 2005 London bombings.

Britain says militants may launch further attacks on tourist resorts in Tunisia.

Attacks may be carried out by “individual­s who are unknown to the authoritie­s and whose actions are inspired by terrorist groups via social media”, the Foreign Office said in updated travel advice on its website late on Saturday.

Britain’s Defence Secretary Michael Fallon and Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond, writing in separate Sunday newspapers, said the Tunisian murders would inform Britain’s defence and security this year and stiffen London’s resolve to tackle what they described as the poisonous narrative of extremism.

Warning

As ministers warned the toll would likely rise, details began to emerge of those gunned down in Friday’s massacre at a popular beach resort. Among the dead were reportedly 19-year-old student Joel Richards, his uncle Adrian Evans, 49, and his grandfathe­r. Joel’s 16-year-old brother Owen survived.

Other victims were named as 24-year-old Carly Lovett and a couple in their 40s, Sue Davey and Scott Chalkley. They were among at least 38 people from several countries killed in the attack in Port el Kantaoui near Sousse, about 140 kilometres (90 miles) south of Tunis.

Another 39 people were injured, including 25 Britons, in the attack which was claimed by the IS militant group, which controls large parts of Iraq and Syria. Announcing the 15 dead, Foreign Office minister Tobias Ellwood said the number “may well rise, as several more have been seriously injured in this horrific attack”.

Prime Minister David Cameron had earlier warned that Britain needed to prepare “for the fact that many of those killed in the attack were British”.

He condemned those responsibl­e as “evil”, saying the victims were “innocent holidaymak­ers relaxing and enjoying time with their friends and families... they did not pose a threat to anybody”.

The attack represents the largest British loss of life in a terror incident since four suicide bombers blew themselves up on the London transport system on July 7, 2005, killing 52 people.

“This is the most significan­t terrorist attack on British people since 7/7 and highlights the ongoing threat of IS,” said Ellwood, whose own brother died in the 2002 Bali bombings.

British police have sent forensic experts and detectives to Tunisia to help identify victims and gather evidence. Officers were also interviewi­ng survivors who flew home from the resort on Saturday, in particular looking for any phone footage taken of the incident.

About 20,000 British tourists were on package holidays in Tunisia at the time of the attack, according to ABTA, the country’s largest travel associatio­n.

Several travel firms laid on special flights to repatriate holidaymak­ers desperate to get home.

The TUI group, which includes Thomson and First Choice, sent ten planes on Saturday to repatriate 1,000 tourists and hopes to bring home a total of 2,500 by late Sunday. Jet2, which has more than 1,000 customers on holiday in Tunisia, said it had repatriate­d 205 people and would send two further planes to collect more over the weekend.

Both companies cancelled their holidays to Tunisia for the coming week. After returning home, Olivia Leathley described how she and her boyfriend heard grenades and gunfire and saw “hundreds of people running and screaming from the beach”.

“Somebody shouted, ‘they’re inside, run!’. We just ran as far away from the bullets as we could. It was all happening so quickly, it was deafening,” she told the BBC.

The shooting was the second attack on tourists in Tunisia within three months, and came the same day as a bombing in Kuwait, which was also claimed by the IS group, and a suspected extremist murder at a factory in France.

Cameron on Saturday chaired a meeting of the government’s Cobra emergency committee, while interior minister Theresa May was due to chair another meeting.

After speaking to the leaders of Tunisia, France, Kuwait and Germany, Cameron tweeted: “Together, we’ll make sure terrorists do not win.”

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