Cape Argus

Passport forgery kingpin nabbed

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BANGKOK: Thai authoritie­s said yesterday they had arrested Iranian Murel Gurat, 45, who they accuse of leading one of the largest passport forgery networks in the country for more than a decade.

Department of Special Investigat­ion officials and police seized forgery equipment and 1 053 stolen passports from more than 60 nationalit­ies, mostly European, said police Colonel Songsak Raksaksaku­l, the agency’s commission­er for transnatio­nal crimes.

The attack on the famed National Bardo Museum was the first on a tourist site in years in Tunisia, a shaky young democracy that has struggled to keep Islamic extremist violence at bay.

It wasn’t immediatel­y clear who the attackers were but security forces immediatel­y flooded the area. Tunisia’s parliament building, next to the museum, was evacuated.

Private TV channel Wataniya showed masked Tunisian security forces escorting dozens of tourists up nearby steps and away from the danger, as armed security forces pointed guns toward an adjacent building. Many elderly people, apparently tourists, ran in panic to safety, as well as at least one couple carrying two children.

Interior Ministry spokesman Mohamed Ali Aroui told Radio Mosaique the standoff was over after the raid. He did not give nationalit­ies for the foreign victims.

Poland’s foreign ministry said three Poles were among the wounded while the Italian foreign ministry said at least two Italians were wounded and 100 other Italians had been taken to a secure location.

Some of the Italians in the museum were believed to have been passengers aboard the Costa Fascinosa, a cruise liner making a seven-day trip of the western Mediterran­ean that had docked in Tunis.

Ship owner Costa Crociere confirmed that some of its 3 161 passengers were visiting the capital yesterday and that a tour of the Bardo was on the itinerary, but said it couldn’t confirm how many, if any, passengers were in the museum at the time.

All passengers had been recalled to the ship, which was in touch with local authoritie­s and the Italian foreign Ministry.

The attack was a strong blow to Tunisia’s efforts to revive its crucial tourism industry.

The museum, built in a 15th century palace, is the largest in Tunisia and houses one of the world’s largest collection­s of Roman mosaics among its 8 000 works. The museum is 4km from the city centre. A new wing with contempora­ry architectu­re was built as part of a 2009 renovation.

“It is not by chance that today’s terrorism affects a country that represents hope for the Arab world. The hope for peace, the hope for stability, the hope for democracy. This hope must live,” French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said minutes after the crisis ended.

Tunisia recently completed a rocky road to democracy after overthrowi­ng its author- itarian president in 2011, seen by many as the start of the so-called Arab Spring.

The country has been more stable than other countries in the region, but has struggled with violence by Islamic extremists in recent years, including some linked to the Islamic State (IS) group. It also has extremists linked to al-Qaida’s north Africa arm who occasional­ly target Tunisian security forces.

A disproport­ionately large number of Tunisian recruits – about 3 000, according to government estimates – have joined IS fighters in Syria and Iraq.

The US Embassy in Tunis was attacked in September 2012, seriously damaging the embassy grounds and an adjoining American school. Four of the assailants were killed. Overall, though, the violence that Tunisia has seen in recent years has been largely focused on security forces, not foreigners or tourist sites.

The attack comes the day after Tunisian security officials confirmed the death in neighbouri­ng Libya of a leading suspect in Tunisian terror attacks and the killings of two opposition figures in Tunisia.

Ahmed Rouissi gained the nickname of the “black box of terrorism”. The informatio­n on his death was made public by security officials giving testimony in parliament and cited by the official TAP news agency. – Sapa-AP

 ?? PICTURE: AP ?? BLOODY ATTACK: A victim is evacuated by rescue workers outside the Bardo museum in Tunis, Tunisia yesterday. Gunmen opened fire at the leading museum in the capital, killing 17 foreign tourists and two Tunisians. A later raid by security forces left...
PICTURE: AP BLOODY ATTACK: A victim is evacuated by rescue workers outside the Bardo museum in Tunis, Tunisia yesterday. Gunmen opened fire at the leading museum in the capital, killing 17 foreign tourists and two Tunisians. A later raid by security forces left...
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