Tunisia’s to build wall along border with Libya

Move to prevent the infiltration of Islamist fighters follows attack that killed 38 tourists

Tunisian security forces  patrol a beach near the site of a terror attack in Sousse, Tunisia. Photograph: Mohamed Messara/EPA
Tunisian security forces patrol a beach near the site of a terror attack in Sousse, Tunisia. Photograph: Mohamed Messara/EPA

Tunisia’s government said it will build a wall along its border with Libya to prevent the infiltration of Islamist fighters following a beach front attack that killed 38 tourists.

The wall, that will cover about a third of the 500km (310 mile) border, will be ready by the end of the year, Tunisian prime minister Habib Essid said in a television interview on Tuesday. The government has already started construction, said Essid, although he warned that protecting the border would be “difficult, very difficult.”

While Tunisia has escaped the worst of the unrest that swept through Libya, Syria and Egypt since 2011, the violence is hurting an economy struggling to recover after the Arab Spring uprising that toppled president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.

The barrier is one of the measures Tunisia has announced to counter the threat of Islamic militancy that has targeted the tourism sector, which accounts for about 7 per cent of the country’s economy. A month-long state of emergency was declared on July 4th.

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The Tunisian government has said that the gunman who carried out the attack in the Sousse resort last month was trained in Libya. Perpetrators of another fatal shooting at the country’s main museum in March also came from the war-torn neighbor. The Islamic State branch in Libya claimed responsibility for both attacks. – (Bloomberg)