Tunisia pays price as Daesh violence spills over from Libya

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Tunisia pays price as Daesh violence spills over from Libya
Policemen patrol during a military operation in a village some 50 kilometres from the town of Ben Guerdane in Tunisia near the Libyan border .

Tunis/Algiers - Officials say they are still determining if the militants had been in Libya before or had returned from fighting with Daesh overseas.

By Reuters

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Published: Sun 13 Mar 2016, 11:00 PM

Last updated: Tue 15 Mar 2016, 8:48 AM

The signal to attack came from the mosque, sending dozens of fighters storming through the Tunisian town of Ben Guerdan to hit army and police posts in street battles that lit the dawn sky with tracer bullets.
Militants used a megaphone to chant "God is Great," and reassure residents they were Daesh, there to save the town near the Libyan border from the "tyrant" army. Most were Tunisians themselves, with local accents, and even some familiar faces, officials and witnesses to Monday's attack said.
Hours later, 36 militants were dead, along with 12 soldiers and seven civilians, in an assault authorities described as an attempt by Daesh to carve out terrain in Tunisia.
Whether Daesh aimed to hold territory as they have in Iraq, Syria and Libya, or intended only to dent Tunisia's already battered security, is unclear and the group has yet to officially claim the attack.
But as fuller details of the Ben Guerdan fighting emerge, the incident highlights the risk Tunisia faces from home-grown militants drawn to Iraq, Syria and Libya, and who have threatened to bring their war back home.
Despite Tunisian forces' preparations to confront returning fighters, and their defeat of militants in Ben Guerdan, Monday's assault shows how the country is vulnerable to violence spilling over from Libya as Daesh expands there.
Authorities are still investigating the Ben Guerdan attack. But most of the militants appear to have been already in the town, with a few brought in from Libya. Arms caches were deposited around the city before the assault.
"Most of them were from Ben Guerdan, we know their faces. They knew where to find the house of the counter-terrorist police chief," one witness, Sabri Ben Saleh, told. Troops have killed 14 more militants around Ben Guerdan since Monday. Others have been arrested and more weapons seized.
Officials say they are still determining if the militants had been in Libya before or had returned from fighting with Daesh overseas. But that such a large number of militants and arms were in Tunisia is no surprise. After its revolt in 2011 to topple Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, Tunisia has struggled with growing militancy.
More than 3,000 Tunisians have left to fight with Daesh in Iraq and Syria, according to government estimates. Tunisian security sources say many are with Daesh in Libya.
But the scale of Monday's attack was unprecedented. The militants were well-organised, handing out weapons to their fighters from a vehicle moving through the city, with knowledge of the town and its military barracks. "We came across a group of terrorists with their Kalashnikovs, and they told us: 'Don't worry we are not here to target you. We are the Daesh and we are here for the tyrants in the army,'" said Hassein Taba, a local resident.
The attack tests Tunisia at a difficult time. After Daesh violence last year, the tourism industry that represents seven per cent of the economy is struggling to tempt visitors to return. With its new constitution, free elections and secular history, Tunisia is a target for jihadists looking to upset a young democracy just five years after the overthrow of dictator Ben Ali.
"The battle of Ben Guerdane in Tunisia, 20 miles from the Libyan border ... is proof enough that the Daesh has cells far and wide," said Geoff Porter, at North Africa Risk Consulting. "But what these cells can reliably do ... and how they are directed by Daesh leadership in Sirte, let alone in Iraq and Syria, is not known."


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