US issues travel alert for southeastern Tunisia

US issues travel alert for southeastern Tunisia

April 06, 2016
A Tunisian police officer gestures near a police station after attack by the Daesh militants on army and police barracks in the town of Ben Guerdan, Tunisia, near the Libyan border. — File photo: Reuters
A Tunisian police officer gestures near a police station after attack by the Daesh militants on army and police barracks in the town of Ben Guerdan, Tunisia, near the Libyan border. — File photo: Reuters

Washington — The US government is warning its citizens to avoid visiting southeastern Tunisia near the Libyan border as well as the country's mountainous western areas due to "the threat of terrorism."

In a travel warning out Friday, the State Department warns that the Daesh group have targeted Tunisian security officials, tourists and civilians in the regions.

The warning urges US citizens to "exercise caution" in Tunisia "when frequenting public venues," especially tourist sites, and to avoid political gatherings, "rallies, large crowds and demonstrations, as even demonstrations that are meant to be peaceful can be unpredictable."

Tunisia, the birthplace of the Arab Spring, has suffered from terrorist violence since the 2011 revolution.

A raid on the Libyan frontier town of Ben Guerdane, blamed on the Daesh group, killed 20 people in March.

Last year Daesh claimed responsibility for attacks on the Bardo museum in Tunis and a popular resort hotel, killing 59 tourists in total, as well as a suicide bombing that killed 12 presidential guards.

The government recently extended by three months a state of emergency imposed following terror attacks, while the United States announced a $24.9-million (22-million-euro) project to install an electronic surveillance system on Tunisia's border with Libya.


April 06, 2016
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