Tunisia will shut down about 80
mosques accused of inciting violence, Prime Minister Habib Essid has
said, after a beach attack that left 39 people dead.
The mosques, which operate outside state control, are spreading "venom" and will close within a week, he said.
On Friday a gunman opened fire on tourists in the resort town of Sousse.
Tunisians,
Britons, Germans, Belgians, French and at least one Irish citizen were
among those killed in the attack, claimed by Islamic State (IS).
The gunman was shot dead by police. Officials say he was a student not previously known to authorities.
This
was the second major attack on tourists in Tunisia since March, when
militants killed 22 people, mainly foreigners, at a museum in the
capital.
'People screaming'
Speaking
at a news conference in Tunis, Mr Essid said: "Some mosques continue to
spread their propaganda and their venom to promote terrorism."
He said they would be closed by the interior ministry.
Security officials said one attacker, who had posed as a swimmer but was
carrying a rifle under a parasol, started shooting on the beach before
entering the Hotel Riu Imperial Marhaba, continuing to shoot.
One British holidaymaker in Sousse, Steve Johnson, told the BBC: "We
were just lying on the beach as usual and... we heard what we thought at
first was fireworks.
"But it was soon pretty obvious... that it was firearms that were being discharged and people screaming and starting to run."
IS
said it was behind Friday's attack, identifying the gunman as Abu Yahya
al-Qayrawani. Social media accounts close to the group showed pictures
of him.
IS had urged followers to step up assaults during the holy Muslim month of Ramadan. At the scene: BBC's Rana Jawad
This was a brazen attack that has affected everyone here.
Tourists
gathered in the hotel lobby of the Marhaba Imperial consoling each
other. Most were thankful they had survived and described a day where
they faced their worst fears: not seeing their children again back home
or losing a loved one before their eyes.
A woman sat in alone in a
corner silently crying with her packed luggage sitting beside her. So
many here were frustrated at having to stay at the scene of the attack
tonight, but one busload after another took many of the residents away.
These are sobering times for a country, and people now reeling from the effects of deadly attacks on tourists.
But the people of Sousse remain defiant: they are socialising with
friends and family, and large parts of the city are still lit up on what
is arguably its darkest day yet.
'He took a bullet for me'
One survivor told the BBC how her fiance, a Welsh tourist, had been shot three times as he used his body as a shield.
"He
took a bullet for me," said Saera Wilson. "I owe him my life because he
threw himself in front of me when the shooting started.
"It was
the bravest thing I've ever known. But I just had to leave him under the
sunbed because the shooting just kept on coming.
"I ran back,
past bodies on the beach to reach our hotel. It was chaos - there was a
body in the hotel pool and it was just full of blood. Welsh tourist was human shield The UK Foreign Office said the British embassy in Tunis was sending a crisis team to the area.
"Any
British nationals in these hotels or nearby should remain indoors, and
contact their tour operator and the Foreign Office," the FCO said in its
updated travel advice.
Many of the tourists in hotels affected by
the attack left the country overnight with tour operators arranging
special flights to take them home.
Friday's attack was the deadliest in Tunisia's recent history. The
country has seen militant Islamists gain strength since the overthrow of
long-serving ruler Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali in in 2011.
Democratic
elections after Ben Ali's removal saw the moderate Islamist Ennahda
party take power before the secularist Nidaa Tounes government won a
parliamentary poll in October.
However, neither party has been
able effectively to combat Islamist violence - which has been made worse
by conflict in neighbouring Libya and by Tunisian fighters returning
home after joining Islamist campaigns in Iraq and Syria.
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