No casualties as Tunisia security forces kill man wearing explosive belt

A wanted militant wearing an explosive belt blew
himself up in the Tunisian capital after being surrounded by police, the
government said on Wednesday, but there were no other casualties.
The third such incident within a week comes months
ahead of an election and at the peak of a tourist season in which Tunisia is
hoping for a record number of visitors.
Witnesses had told Reuters the man blew himself up
in the Intilaka area of the capital, Tunis, after being surrounded by the
police. Residents heard a loud explosion.
An interior ministry spokesman said police opened
fire on the man, whom authorities described as a wanted militant called Aymen
Smiri, without giving further details.
“Following a long chase, special forces surrounded
the terrorist,” the interior ministry said in statement. “When forces began
shooting, he blew himself up with an explosive belt he was wearing.”
There were no other casualties, it added.
Two suicide bombers blew themselves up in separate
attacks on police in Tunis on Thursday, killing one police officer and wounding
several people. The Islamic State militant group claimed responsibility for
both attacks.
Tunisia has been battling militant groups operating
in remote areas near its 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 center
of Tunis, wounding 15 people, including 10 police officers, in an explosion
that shattered a long period of calm after dozens of people died in militant
attacks in 2015.
Security has tightened 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 the Mediterranean seaside town of Sousse. A
third attack targeted presidential guards in the capital. ISIS claimed
responsibility.