Tunisian President Kais Saied on Sunday condemned the attack in the coastal resort town of Sousse that killed one security officer and injured another. Three suspected Islamic militants who rammed their vehicle into security officers and attacked them with knives were shot dead by Tunisian forces, authorities said Sunday. "I do not know the intentions, the arrangements, of those who carried out this terrorist act, but they did not succeed in the past and will not succeed in the future," Saied said.




Saied spoke to journalists during a short visit to the coastal town.
An Interior Ministry statement said the assailants took refuge in a school after the attack and died in a shootout with security forces.
The North African nation's prime minister, Hicham Mechichi, appeared to suggest that the assailants' planning may have been faulty.
The previous attack in Sousse on June 26, 2015, dealt a heavy blow to Tunisia's tourism sector, a pillar of its economy.
The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for that attack. The story at length Tunisian forces shot dead three suspected Islamic militants who rammed their vehicle into security officers and attacked them with knives, killing one and injuring another in the coastal resort town of Sousse, authorities said Sunday.
Police officers and forensic workers could be seen examining the site after the attack.
Sousse was the site of Tunisia’s deadliest extremist attack in 2015, when a massacre killed 38 people, most of them British tourists.
An Interior Ministry statement said Sunday that the assailants took refuge in a school after the attack and died in a shootout with security forces.
The North African nation's prime minister, Hicham Mechichi, appeared to suggest that the assailants' planning may have been faulty.
He also announced the arrest of a fourth suspect who had been aboard the vehicle that rammed the National Guard officers.
Hatem Zargouni, director of security for Sousse, said the assailants stabbed the officers and then fled with their weapons.
The injured officer was hospitalized.
The previous attack in Sousse on June 26, 2015, dealt a heavy blow to Tunisia's tourism sector, a pillar of its economy.
The Islamic State group claimed responsibility for that attack.
***AFP***





Video editor • Bridget UGWESource: africanews.com