Tunis Bombing: One Dead And Several Injured After Suicide Bombers Target Tunisian Capital

It is not yet known who is behind the attacks.
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Tunisian police work at the site of an attack in the Tunisian capital's main avenue Habib Bourguiba
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A police officer has died after two suicide bombers blew themselves up in separate attacks on police in the Tunisian capital on Thursday.

Seven other people were left injured, the government said.

The first attack targeted a police patrol in Charles de Gaulle Street in central Tunis. Shortly afterwards, a second suicide bomber blew himself up near a police station in al-Gorjani district, the Interior Ministry said.

It is not immediately known who is behind the attacks, which come months before an election and at the peak of a tourist season in which Tunisia is hoping for a record number of visitors.

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Tunisian police officers stand guard near the explosion site in Tunis
AP

Heavily armed police cordoned off the locations of the attacks, one of which was about 200 meters away from the French embassy.

Reuters witnesses saw people rushing away from the scene, while the body of one suicide bomber lay on the ground.

“I was shopping with my daughter and we heard a big explosion. We saw the body of the terrorist lying on the ground near a police vehicle after he blew himself up,” said a man who give his name only as Mohamed.

Interior Ministry spokesman Sofian Zaak said the attackers had not yet been identified, and he called on the public to show strength and not panic.

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People wait behind barriers after the explosion
AP

Tunisia has been battling militant groups operating in remote areas near the border with Algeria since an uprising overthrew autocratic leader Zine Abidine Ben Ali in 2011. High unemployment has also stoked unrest in recent years.

Last October, a woman blew herself up in the centre of the capital Tunis, wounding 15 people including 10 police officers in an explosion that broke a long period of calm after dozens had died in militant attacks in 2015.

Security has improved since authorities imposed a state of emergency in November 2015 after those attacks – one at a museum in Tunis and another on a beach in Sousse. A third attack targeted presidential guards in the capital. Islamic State claimed responsibility.

The attacks scared off holidaymakers and investors, worsening the country’s economic problems.