A Tunisian man, who allegedly was involved in an attack on the Bardo National Museum that killed more than 20 people in Tunis in 2015, can be deported from Germany. German public broadcaster ARD reported Sunday that German Interior Minister Thomas de Maiziere confirmed Tunisia had sent the documents needed to deport him.
Category: Tunis, Tunisia
Merkel visits Egypt for talks on stemming migration
Merkel’s spokesman, Steffen Seibert, said ahead of the trip that Germany wants to help Egypt strengthen its coast guard and crack down on illegal trafficking across the Mediterranean, where thousands of migrants die at sea each year. Merkel held talks with President Abdel-Fattah el-Sissi shortly after her arrival, and is expected to meet with businessmen, civil society representatives, and Muslim and Christian leaders before heading to Tunisia on Friday.
UK investigation claims Tunisian security ‘cowardly’ handling of…
Tunisian police dealing with a gun rampage in a beach resort in Sousse were “at best shambolic, at worst cowardly”, according to a seven-week enquiry by lawyers and coroners at the UK’s Royal Courts of Justice. Judge Nicholas Lorraine-Smith delivered his findings of the inquest into the deaths of 30 British tourists in the 2015 massacre by an Islamic State group-linked gunman on Tuesday to families of the victims and survivors.
UK investigation claims Tunisian security ‘cowardly’ handling of…
Tunisian police dealing with a gun rampage in a beach resort in Sousse were “at best shambolic, at worst cowardly”, according to a seven-week enquiry by lawyers and coroners at the UK’s Royal Courts of Justice. Judge Nicholas Lorraine-Smith delivered his findings of the inquest into the deaths of 30 British tourists in the 2015 massacre by an Islamic State group-linked gunman on Tuesday to families of the victims and survivors.
Coroner to deliver conclusions at inquest into deaths of Tunisia attack victims
The coroner at the inquest into the deaths of 30 Britons killed by an extremist gunman in Tunisia is to deliver his conclusions. Judge Nicholas Loraine-Smith is expected to reject requests that “neglect” by holiday firms and hotels contributed to their deaths, after Seifeddine Rezgui opened fire in Sousse on June 26 2015, shooting 38 people dead.
Judge to deliver conclusions at inquest into deaths of Tunisia attack victims
Families of the Britons killed in the Tunisia terror attacks are expected to gather today in a final search for answers. Families of the Britons killed in the Tunisia terror attacks are expected to gather today in a final search for answers.
Tui accused of ‘gross neglect’ in Tunisia beach massacre
Inquest into the deaths of the Britons at the Royal Courts of Justice heard that ‘part of the attack or most of it could have been prevented’ Judge Nicholas Loraine-Smith was told to consider a ‘neglect’ conclusion, arguing that there had been ‘gross neglect’ on the part of the TUI travel company The deaths of 30 Britons in the Tunisia terrorist attack could have been prevented had there not been ‘gross neglect’ by the travel companies they depended upon, an inquest has been told. Seifeddine Rezgui opened fire at the five-star Riu Imperial Marhaba Hotel in Sousse on June 26 2015, leaving 38 people dead.
Amnesty accuses Tunisian security forces of abuses
Soldiers patrol after Monday’s attack by Islamic State militants on army and police barracks in the town of Ben Guerdan, Tunisia, near the Libyan border. REUTERS/Zoubeir Souissi A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Daily Star on February 14, 2017, on page 8.
Sousse inquests: ‘Four of one family went on boys’ trip and only one came back’
Charles Patrick Evans, Joel Richards and Adrian Evans were among the 30 Britons killed in the Tunisian beach massacre A woman whose son, brother and father were killed by a gunman in a Tunisian hotel has told their inquests how the terror attack “destroyed” her family. Suzanne Richards said the deaths of Charles Patrick Evans, 78, Adrian Evans, 49 and Joel Richards, 19, had left the remaining members of her tight-knit family “broken”.
Prosecuted for owning women’s clothing: Latest victims of Tunisia’s homophobic laws
Two young Tunisians have been convicted of “indecent assault through obscene behavior” on the basis of women’s clothing found at their flat, the ADHEOS LGBT advocacy organization has reported. The men, aged 19 and 25, have been handed prison sentences of two months, escaping the harsher three year sentence awarded for homosexual acts.
Libyan Foreign Minister, Mohamed Taher Siala, top center, attends a…
Libyan Foreign Minister, Mohamed Taher Siala, top center, attends a ministerial meeting of countries neighboring Libya which include Egypt, Tunisia, Algeria, Sudan, Niger and Chad, as well as United Nations envoy, Martin Kobler, third right, in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Jan. 21, 2017.
Holiday chiefs ‘didn’t want to scare Tunisia tourists with army of police’
The Riu Imperial Marhaba Hotel in Sousse, Tunisia, where 30 Britons were killed in an attack by extremist Seifeddine Rezgui in June 2015 Tour operators wanted to increase security in Sousse before 38 people were killed in a terrorist attack, but did not want holidaymakers to be “scared by seeing an army of police”, an inquest has heard. The hearing into the deaths of 30 Britons in the Tunisian resort in June 2015 was told that in a meeting a month before the attack there was a discussion about police security and how it could make tourists feel “uncomfortable”.
Stay or go? Germany’s difficult and controversial deportation of North African migrants
German migration authorities rejected 8,363 asylum applications from North Africa in the period from January-November last year. Over that period, just 368 people were returned to their countries of origin.
1,000 Tunisians fearing return of jihadis march to say ‘No’
Up to 1,000 Tunisians have marched in the capital to protest the return of jihadis from Syria, Iraq and neighboring Libya. Authorities say that about 3,000 Tunisians have traveled to conflict zones and about 800 have returned.
Germany arrests Tunisian who dined with market attacker
Security members stand in front of an asylum seekers’ shelter in Berlin Wednesday Jan. 4, 2017. On Tuesday police searched the shelter.
Berlin truck attacker may have got gun in Switzerland – report
The Tunisian man who killed 12 people last month by ploughing a truck into a Berlin Christmas market had made several trips to Switzerland and may have procured a gun there that he used to hijack a truck for the attack, German broadcaster ZDF reported. “A lot speaks for that in the investigations so far,” ZDF said of the possibility that Anis Amri, a failed asylum seeker from Tunisia, obtained the gun in Switzerland.
Italy’s PM: Berlin market attacker radicalized in prison
Italian Premier Paolo Gentiloni answers to journalists’ questions as he holds a year-end press conference, in Rome, Thursday Dec. 29, 2016. Gentiloni said the government will take further measures to combat terrorism following the shooting death of a Tunisian fugitive near Milan, including speedier repatriation of illegal migrants.
Italy’s PM: No Italian links found for Berlin market suspect
Italian Premier Paolo Gentiloni said Thursday that there are no indications the Tunisian fugitive from the Berlin Christmas market attack, who was shot dead near Milan, had any significant contacts in Italy . Italian investigators have been trying to determine whether Anis Amri tapped a jihadi network in Italy , his European port of entry when he left Tunisia in early 2011 and the end of his nearly four-day flight following the Berlin truck attack that left 12 dead.
.com | Tunisia security forces warn of returning jihadis
Tunisia’s security forces called on the government on Sunday to take “exceptional measures” to combat the return of jihadists fighting for extremist groups abroad. Tunisia has seen a wave of jihadist attacks since its 2011 revolution, including on foreign tourists, and the United Nations estimates that more than 5,000 Tunisians are fighting for extremist outfits, mainly in Iraq and Syria.
Tunisia security forces warn of returning extremists
Tunisian women shout slogans during a demonstration outside parliament against allowing Tunisians who joined the ranks of jihadist groups to return to the country, in the capital Tunis on December 24, 2016. / AFP / FETHI BELAID
Investigators seek supply network for slain Berlin attacker
In this Dec. 22, 2016, photo a police officer holds a submachine gun during an operation at the shopping centre “Centro” in Oberhausen, Germany. Two men have been arrested in Duisburg since they were suspected to plan a terror attack on the shopping center.
Investigation into Berlin truck attack turns to terrorist network
A man mourns at a makeshift memorial for the victims of the Christmas market attack near the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gedaechtniskirche in Berlin on December 24. MILAN-Investigators on Saturday sought to hunt down where the Berlin Christmas market attacker got possible logistical support to cross at least two European borders and evade capture for days before being killed in a police shootout during a routine stop in a Milan suburb. Tunisian fugitive Anis Amri ‘s fingerprints and wallet were found in a truck that plowed into a Christmas market in Berlin on Monday night, killing 12 people and injuring 56 others.
The Latest: Police: Berlin market attacker recruited nephew
A thermical blanket covers a body moments after a shootout between police and a man near a train station in Milan’s Sesto San Giovanni neighborhood, Italy, early Friday, Dec. 23, 2016. Italy’s interior minister Marco Minniti… .
Berlin market attack suspect’s fingerprints ‘found in truck’
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Tunisian Suspect’s Fingerprints Found in Berlin Truck Cab
Tunisian suspect Anis Amri’s fingerprints have been found in the cab of the truck that plowed into a Christmas market in Berlin, strengthening the case linking him to the deadly attack, Germany’s top security official said Thursday. Authorities across Europe were scrambling to find the 24-year-old suspect, a day after Germany issued a wanted notice for him and warned that he may be “violent and armed.”
Suspected Berlin attacker’s past comes to light
The man wanted by police for his suspected role in the Berlin Christmas market attack is believed to have been on authorities’ radar for some time after arriving in Europe as a migrant. Matthew Larotonda reports.
Europe scrambles to find Tunisian suspect in Berlin attack
Authorities across Europe scrambled Thursday to track down a Tunisian man suspected of driving a truck into a Christmas market in Berlin, as one of his brothers urged him to surrender. Nearly three days after the deadly attack that killed 12 people and injured 48 others, the market in the centre of the German capital reopened, with concrete blocks in place at the roadside to provide extra security.
Hamas mourns killing of group’s drone expert
Gaza’s Hamas rulers are mourning the killing of a Tunisian aviation expert who supervised the militant group’s drone program. Hamas has accused Israel of assassinating him.
Hamas mourns killing of group’s drone expert
Gaza’s Hamas rulers are mourning the killing of a Tunisian aviation expert who supervised the militant group’s drone program. Hamas has accused Israel of assassinating him.