(Reuters) -
Tunisian forces killed nine militants during a raid in a southern region
as part of crackdown following the attack on the Tunis Bardo museum
that targeted foreign tourists, an interior ministry official said on
Sunday. The operations late on
Saturday in Gafsa region came hours before thousands of Tunisians were
expected to join world leaders including French President Francois
Hollande in a march of solidarity in Tunis. "Our
forces killed nine terrorists in a large operation in Sidi Aich in
Gafsa. They also captured arms and explosives," said Interior Ministry
spokesman Mohamed Ali Aroui. Two
gunmen killed 21 tourists at the Bardo Museum nearly two weeks ago, in
one of the worst attacks in the North African country that mostly
avoided violence since its 2011 uprising against autocrat Zine
El-Abidine Ben Ali. A
fourth French national died of her wounds following the March 18 attack
on the national museum, the French president's office said in a
statement on Saturday. Japanese,
Polish, Spanish and Colombian tourists were among those killed in the
attack the government says was aimed at destroying Tunisia's vital
tourism industry, which makes up around seven percent of its economy. Islamic
State has claimed the Bardo attack though the Tunisian government has
said fighters from a local group, Okba Ibn Nafaa, that has been mostly
based the Chaambi mountains bordering Algeria, were involved. The Bardo attack underscored how Islamist militant loyalties are blurring as they seek a new North African front, especially in Libya, where political chaos and factional fighting has allowed Islamic State to gain an outpost. On
Sunday, thousands of Tunisians are expected to take part in a
solidarity march with French leader Hollande and Italy's Prime Minister
Matteo Renzi among the foreign dignitaries taking part in the
demonstration. Four years after its "Arab Spring" uprising against Ben Ali, Tunisia
has been praised by the international community as a model of democratic
transition with a politics of compromise, a new constitution and free
elections.
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