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Tunisia's president renews state of emergency for another two months

The state of emergency was imposed after a bloody attack on a beach resort killed 38 tourists, mostly Britons

Ap
Friday 31 July 2015 14:01 BST
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President Moncef Marzouki stands in front of coffin, draped in the Tunisian flag, of the one of the eight soldiers who died in an ambush by an armed group in Mount Chaambi
President Moncef Marzouki stands in front of coffin, draped in the Tunisian flag, of the one of the eight soldiers who died in an ambush by an armed group in Mount Chaambi (Getty Images)

Tunisia's presidency on Friday extended the country's state of emergency for an additional two months as the country battles a violent Islamic insurgency that last month killed 38 tourists on a beach.

The brief statement on the presidency's Facebook page said the decision was taken following consultations with the speaker of parliament and the prime minister, and would take effect Monday.

Just over a month ago, Tunisia was stunned by a bloody attack by a single gunman on a beach resort killing 38 tourists, mostly Britons. The attack followed another one on tourists back in March.

Tunisia had been criticized for lax security at tourist sites, and Britain called for all its citizens to depart in the wake of the attack.

President Beji Caid Essebsi declared a state of emergency on July 4, and an additional 3,000 officers have been deployed to tourist sites.

Under the state of emergency, the army has been deployed to guard sites and authorized to shoot to kill if under threat. Rallies of more than three people are also banned — though this provision has rarely been enforced.

Tunisia's parliament nearly unanimously passed a new anti-terror law on July 25 that is meant to aid the fight against militant groups. (AP)

In the past week, Tunisian security forces have carried out an aggressive string of raids on suspected militants in cities around the country, arresting dozens and killing at least one.

Tunisia's parliament nearly unanimously passed a new anti-terror law on July 25 that is meant to aid the fight against militant groups. But it has provoked fears that the freedoms won in the 2011 revolution might be threatened.

A joint statement issued by eight rights groups, including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch expressed concern Friday over the law's loose definition of terrorism and lengthy preventive detention provisions.

"Tunisia's new counterterrorism law imperils human rights and lacks the necessary safeguards against abuse," said the statement. "The law grants security forces broad and vague monitoring and surveillance powers."

AP

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