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Tunisia builds anti-jihadi barrier on border with Libya to keep Isis out

Isis-linked militants killed more than 60 people after crossing the border last year

Matt Broomfield
Monday 08 February 2016 04:54 EST
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A Tunisian soldier stands on the partially-completed barrier
A Tunisian soldier stands on the partially-completed barrier (ASSOCIATED PRESS)

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Tunisia is building an "anti-jihadi" barrier along its border with Libya.

Upon completion, the barrier of sand banks and water trenches will stretch 125 miles inland from the coast, covering a little under half the length of the 285-mile border.

There are monitoring centres dispersed along the length of the barricade, which will now be equipped with electronic monitoring equipment. Partially funded by the US and Germany, the barrier is designed to prevent vehicles crossing the border from Isis-linked training camps in west Libya.

The construction of the barricade was announced last July, in the days following an attack by an Isis-linked gunman on a Tunisian tourist resort in which 39 people died.

Three months before that attack near the city of Souse, an al-Qaeda linked splinter group had shot dead 24 people in the Bardo National Museum in Tunis.

Prior to these two attacks, the coastal nation was enjoying a boom in tourism. This was partially traced to Tunisia's reputation as the only country to have successfully transitioned to a liberal-democratic model following the revolutions of the Arab Spring.

But the deaths of 59 foreign tourists in the space of three months challenged the notion of the "Tunisian exception". Last summer, Tourism minister Selma Loumi said he anticipated that the country would lose $500m in tourist revenue as a result of the attacks, wiping out a substantial portion of the country's $50bn GDP.

Both the Sousse gunman and the Bardo militants are understood to have trained in Libya before crossing the border to launch their attacks. The new border defences are the latest attempt on behalf of the Tunisian government to emphasise the continued security of their country relative to its neighbours.

Defence Minister Farhat Horchani said: "Today we finished closing it off, and this will help us protect our border, and stop the threat."

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