New York Post

BLOODY BEACH

ISIS slays dozens at Tunisia tourist resort

- By BECKIE STRUM and JAMIE SCHRAM

An ISISinspir­ed student masqueradi­ng as a beachgoer opened fire on sunbathers at a popular Tunisian resort — killing dozens of vacationer­s.

Dressed in swim trunks, the shooter pulled a Kalashniko­v assault rifle from his sun parasol and sprayed bullets at the mostly European tourists, killing at least 39 and wounding 40, as they lounged on the sand and by the pool at the Mediterran­ean resort of Port El Kantaoui.

Panic ensued as people watched loved ones being shot and parents dashed into the surf to grab their children.

The terrorist continued to spray bullets as he entered the fivestar Riu Imperial Marhaba Hotel, leaving a trail of blood from the marble floor to the pool area, where Tunisian authoritie­s shot him dead.

At first, vacationer­s on the beach with their children said they mistook the crackle of gunfire for fireworks until panicked people sprinted down the beach.

“I just ran to the sea to my children . . . and as I was running towards the hotel the waiters and the security on the beach started saying, ‘Run, run run!’ ” said Irish tourist Elizabeth O’Brien.

Another woman had to be dragged away screaming after her husband was shot. “He was just saying, ‘I love you, I love you,’ and then his eyes rolled back in his head,” said witness Olivia Leathley, of Britain.

The shooter, identified as Saifeddine Rezgui, 23, an elec tricalengi­neering student, targeted tourists and yelled at Tunisians to “stay away!”

“I didn’t come for you,” he shouted.

ISIS took responsibi­lity for the attack in a Twitter post Friday night that referred to the resort as a brothel and the victims as “infidels.”

The hotel said most of its 565 guests were from Europe.

One of the dead has been identified as an Irish woman and at least five were British tourists, officials said.

The seaside massacre took place the same morning a worker was beheaded at a factory in France and a suicide bomber killed 27 people at a Shiite mosque in Kuwait.

A senior US counterter­rorism official told The Post the attacks were uncoordina­ted but likely inspired by a recent call from ISIS militants “to make Ramadan a month of calamities for the nonbelieve­rs.”

American officials condemned the bloodshed. “Let there be no mistake, we are committed to continuing our efforts to hunt and kill terrorists,” said Steven Warren, director of Defense Department operations.

A Tunisian political party that is part of the ruling coalition issued a statement: “There is a tiny but poisonous fringe of society across our region which has wrongly interprete­d the Islamic faith and wishes to destroy Tunisia’s progress, at any cost.”

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