Reuters) -
Tunisian security forces have arrested a group of Islamist militants,
including two women, that planned to carry out attacks in the capital,
Tunis, less than two weeks before parliamentary elections, authorities
said on Tuesday. Since its 2011 uprising, Tunisia has
advanced toward full democracy and is seen as a model for the region.
But the small North African country has also struggled with a rise in
jihadists opposed to its transition. Tunisians
go to the polls on Oct. 26 for their second free parliamentary election
since a 2011 revolt ended Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali's autocratic rule.
Presidential elections will follow in November. "This
terrorist cell with links with the banned group, Ansar al Sharia,
planned to detonate a car bomb in order to assassinate a political
figure," said Mohamed Ali Aroui, an interior ministry spokesman, without
giving further details. But
Ahmed Nejib Chebbi, a prominent leader of the secular Republican Party,
said that interior ministry had alerted him that he was targeted for
assassination by a car bomb. Last year, Tunisia
plunged into a political crisis that lasted for months and almost
derailed its democratic transition after the assassination of two
secular leaders by militants. The
hardline Islamist movement Ansar al Sharia was banned after those
attacks. The United States also brands the group a foreign terrorist
organisation and blames it for a 2012 attack on the U.S. embassy in
Tunis. Police arrested two
women in Ansar Al Sharia, including one who had been responsible for
the group's media wing. Aroui said the woman had also been a contact for
Abu Iyadh, the Ansar al Sharia leader who the official said has fled to
Libya. Officials said security forces had seized a truck-load of arms and cash coming from Libya toward Tunisia's Kef mountains, where some jihadists are hiding out. Tunisia has
arrested some 1,500 suspected jihadists this year, Prime Minister Mehdi
Jomaa told Reuters in interview last week, part of a security crackdown
aimed at safeguarding the North African country's fragile transition to
democracy. Among those
held are hundreds of militants who fought in Syria's war and who could
pose a risk after they return to Tunisia, one of the most secular
nations in the Arab world. Since
April, Tunisia has also deployed thousands of troops in the Chaambi
mountains along its border with Algeria to fight a small group of
militants linked to 'Al Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb', or AQIM, who are
hiding out there.
Tunisia says it thwarted jihadist attack before elections
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Reuters
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