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UK police link Tunisian beach massacre with Bardo museum attack | UK police link Tunisian beach massacre with Bardo museum attack |
(35 minutes later) | |
Scotland Yard says it has established a solid link between the terrorist attack on a Tunisian holiday resort last month and an earlier shooting at the national museum in Tunis. | Scotland Yard says it has established a solid link between the terrorist attack on a Tunisian holiday resort last month and an earlier shooting at the national museum in Tunis. |
The Foreign Office has told British tourists not to visit Tunisia after 38 holidaymakers, 30 of them British, were shot dead on a beach by a lone gunman in Sousse last month. Islamic State later claimed responsibility for the attack. | The Foreign Office has told British tourists not to visit Tunisia after 38 holidaymakers, 30 of them British, were shot dead on a beach by a lone gunman in Sousse last month. Islamic State later claimed responsibility for the attack. |
Counter-terrorism officers now say they have evidentially linked that attack by Seifeddine Rezgui with the March attack on the Bardo museum in the country’s capital, in which 21 tourists and a policeman were killed. | |
Related: Tunisia votes to bring in death penalty for terrorists | Related: Tunisia votes to bring in death penalty for terrorists |
Speaking at a briefing for reporters at Scotland Yard, commander Richard Walton, head of counter-terrorism command, said: “We are now linking evidentially the Bardo museum investigation in Tunisia, that attack, with the Sousse investigation. | |
“We have written to the coroner advising him of the connection between the two.” | “We have written to the coroner advising him of the connection between the two.” |
Walton said he could not give specific details of the evidence linking the two attacks but said it was “strong”. | |
Tunisian authorities have arrested 159 people in relation to the attack in Sousse, with 15 charged with terrorism-related offences. Walton said the authorities had 250 investigators working on the inquiry. | |
Walton said that as well as the 30 Britons who were killed in the shooting, 17 more were injured, out of 34 people in total. | |
He appeared to rule out theories of a second gunman at the beach, saying witness reports matched the description of a lifeguard who is understood to have used a weapon to confront Rezgui. | |
British investigators have taken a total of 459 witness statements from the day of the attack, with more than 370 photos and videos from mobile phones and other devices being assessed. | |
Related: Foreign Office advises Britons to leave Tunisia in wake of attack | Related: Foreign Office advises Britons to leave Tunisia in wake of attack |
The killer’s body remains unclaimed by his family over fear of reprisals and due to shame, Walton said. | |
After the 26 June shootings at the Mediterranean resort of Port El Kantaoui, the Tunisian president, Beji Caid Essebsi, decreed a state of emergency in the country. | |
“We are engaged in a ferocious war against terrorism to protect lives and property, defend the republican regimes,” Tunisia’s prime minister, Habib Essid, told parliament. | “We are engaged in a ferocious war against terrorism to protect lives and property, defend the republican regimes,” Tunisia’s prime minister, Habib Essid, told parliament. |
“We would not have felt obliged to decree the state of emergency if we were not convinced that our country was facing numerous terrorist plans to destabilise the country.” | “We would not have felt obliged to decree the state of emergency if we were not convinced that our country was facing numerous terrorist plans to destabilise the country.” |
As many as 3,000 Tunisians are feared to have gone to Iraq, Syria and Libya to fight with militant groups, raising fears of returning jihadis plotting attacks on home soil. |
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