(Reuters) -
Tunisia's President Beji Caid Essebsi said on Sunday that a third gunman
involved in an attack that killed 23 people, mostly foreign tourists,
at a Tunis museum last week was on the run. The shootings at the
museum inside Tunisia's parliament compound was one of the worst
militant attacks in Tunisian history and brought to light the threat
posed by Islamist militants to the young democracy, four years after its
"Arab Spring" revolt. Two
gunmen were shot dead at the scene and authorities have so far arrested
more than 20 people, of which ten officials believe were directly
involved in the attack. Some had recently returned from fighting for
Islamist militant groups in Syria and Libya. "For
sure there were three because they have been identified and filmed on
surveillance cameras," Essebsi said in a televised interview with Europe
1 radio, iTELE and Le Monde newspaper. "There are two who were executed and one who is on the run somewhere. But in any case, he won't get far," Essebsi said. A
Tunisian security source said investigations were still ongoing, but
the third suspect appeared to have been involved in directing the attack
and logistics, rather than as a gunman. He was known to authorities as
an extremist, the source said. "A third is being sought, he was a participant," the source said. Tourism
minister Salma Loumi told state news agency TAP that world leaders had
been invited to participate on Sunday in a planned march against
terrorism in Tunis. Islamic State militants -- who have taken over parts of Iraq and Syria -- have claimed responsibility for the attack. But social media accounts tied to an al Qaeda-affiliated group in Tunisia have also published purported details of the operation. Whoever
was responsible, the Bardo attack illustrates how Islamist militants
are turning their sights on North Africa. A particular focus is
neighboring Libya, where two rival governments are battling for control,
allowing Islamic State to gain a foothold.
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