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Five militants killed by Tunisian forces near the Libyan border had slipped across with the aim of carrying out “terrorist attacks”, Prime Minister Habib Essid said yesterday.
Essid, in a statement on his official Facebook page, praised the army and national guard units who had eliminated the “terrorist cell sent in from Libya”.
Their killing in a raid on Wednesday evening had “foiled the terrorist operations the cell was planning”, the prime minister said.
At least four of the infiltrators were Tunisian nationals, the interior ministry later said, while the fifth was still to be identified.
One civilian was killed by a stray bullet during the assault on a house outside the town of Ben Guerdane near the border. An army commander was also wounded.
Explosive vests, improvised grenades and a large quantity of munitions were recovered from the slain militants, the interior ministry said.
Six foreign passports were also found, it said without elaborating.
Defence Minister Farhat Horchani, questioned in parliament, said a gunbattle between security forces and the suspects lasted more than an hour.
Troops had been on alert after receiving reports that militants had been slipping across the border this week following a US air strike on an Islamic State (IS) militant group training camp in Libya on February 18 targeting a senior Tunisian commander.
Tunisia has built a 200km barrier that stretches about half the length of its border with Libya in an attempt to keep out militants.
Deadly attacks by IS on foreign holidaymakers last year, which dealt a devastating blow to the country’s tourism industry, are believed to have been planned from Libya.
Last month’s US strike on the IS training camp outside the Libyan city of Sabratha targeted the suspected mastermind of two of the attacks, Noureddine Chouchane.
Washington has said Chouchane was likely killed along with dozens of other militants, and that the strike probably averted a mass shooting or a similar attack in Tunisia.
Britain announced on Monday it was sending a team of around 20 soldiers to Tunisia to train troops patrolling the border with Libya.
Thirty Britons were among 38 foreign holidaymakers killed in a gun and grenade attack on a beach resort near the Tunisian city of Sousse last June. And last March, militant gunmen killed 21 tourists and a policeman at the Bardo Museum in Tunis.
According to a UN working group on the use of mercenaries, over 5,000 Tunisians, mostly aged from 18 to 35, have travelled abroad to join militant groups, especially in Syria, Iraq and Libya.
Morocco fears biological attacks
Morocco said yesterday that the alleged members of a militant cell it arrested in mid-February, including a French national, were plotting to carry out “biological” attacks in the kingdom.
“Some of the seized substances (from the suspects) are classified by international organisations which specialise in health issues as falling within the category of biological weapons dangerous for their capacity to paralyse and destroy the nervous system and cause death,” the interior ministry said.
“Members of the terrorist cell had prepared these deadly substances with a view to using them in their terrorist projects inside the kingdom,” it said in a statement.
On February 18, the ministry announced it had dismantled a “terrorist cell” of 10 people suspected of having links to the Islamic State militant group and planning attacks in the North African country.
The suspects, including a Frenchman, were arrested in several towns, it said, without giving further details on their identities.
Morocco has been on guard against deadly attacks like those claimed by IS in Tunisia last year that killed 59 foreign tourists.
Rabat says 152 “terrorist cells” have been busted since 2002, including 31 over the past three years with ties to militants in Iraq and Syria.
A study by the US-based Soufan Group said in December that at least 1,200 Moroccans had travelled to fight alongside IS in Iraq and Syria in the past 18 months.
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