Tourists scramble to leave Tunisia after deadly
attack (Image source: Yahoo News)
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Thousands of
British tourists are fleeing Tunisia in the aftermath of the bloody terrorist
attack at a resort that left dozens of holidaymakers dead. Authorities said
Britons were the majority among the victims.
Tour operators Thomson and First Choice sent 10 planes
to repatriate all their customers, a total of approximately 2,500 people. They
are, however, just a faction of the 20,000 Britons, who, according to the ABTA
travel association estimate, were spending their holidays in Tunisia at the
time of the attack.
On Friday, a gunman disguised as a tourist carried an
assault rifle concealed in an umbrella to the beach in Sousse in the south of
the country. Thirty-nine people were killed in the massacre, which was the
worst terrorist act Tunisia has witnessed in years. The Syria and Iraq-based
terrorist group Islamic State claimed responsibility for the attack.
RT.com report continues:
Eight of the victims were identified as British
citizens so far, but the number is expected to rise as identification
continues, Prime Minister David Cameron warned the public.
While Britons were the majority among the victims,
citizens of Belgium and Germany were also reported to have been killed.
On Saturday, Buses evacuated holidaymakers from the At
Riu Imperial Marhaba and the Bellevue hotels, where the attack took place. Tour
operators urged their clients to leave. Tour companies offered full refunds to
clients, who chose to cancel their holidays in Tunisia after the Friday attack.
Tunisia’s Prime Minister Habib Essid pledged on
Saturday to ramp up security in the country.
"We are at war against terrorism which represents
a serious danger to national unity during this delicate period that the nation
is going through," he told a media conference in the capital Tunis.
Tourism
is a key industry in Tunisia, which has already declined by a quarter since
March, after terrorists killed 22 people at the national museum in Tunis.
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