BBC News Africa
27 August 2013 Last updated at 14:45 GMT

Tunisia declares Ansar al-Sharia a terrorist group

Tunisia has designated the hardline Salafist Ansar al-Sharia movement a 
"terrorist group", blaming it for the killing of two secular politicians.

PM Ali Larayedh said he had proof it was behind the killings of Chokri Belaid 
and Mohamed Brahmi, which plunged Tunisia into political turmoil.

"Anyone belonging to it must face judicial consequences," he added.

The group, which emerged after the 2011 revolution, seeks the implementation of 
Islamic Sharia law across Tunisia.

Mr Larayedh also said the group was supporting an armed jihadist cell which the 
Tunisian army has been hunting for months in the remote Mount Chaambi region 
along the Algerian border.

The Tunisian army launched an offensive in the region last month after eight 
soldiers were ambushed and killed by gunmen suspected of links to al-Qaeda.

"We have discovered proof that the Ansar group is responsible for the 
assassinations of Chokri Belaid and Mohamed Brahmi and the attacks at Mount 
Chaambi," Prime Minister Larayedh told reporters on Tuesday.

He said Ansar al-Sharia was "liaising with AQIM (al-Qaeda in the Islamic 
Maghreb)", while pledging that Tunisia would fight against the group "whatever 
the sacrifices".

"This organisation is implicated in the terrorist operations in Tunisia," Mr 
Larayedh said.

"It is responsible for a weapons storage network, it is responsible for 
planning assassinations, and attacks against security and army posts," he added.

Ansar leader Seif Allah Ibn Hussein, also known as Abu Iyadh, is currently in 
hiding after an arrest warrant was issued for allegedly inciting an attack on 
the US embassy in Tunis in September 2012, which killed four people.

Members of Ansar al-Sharia clashed with security forces in May after the 
authorities banned the group's annual congress for "inciting violence against 
state institutions".

The assassinations of Mr Belaid and Mr Brahmi within six months of each other 
plunged Tunisia into a political crisis.

The moderate Islamist Ennahda party - elected after the overthrow of President 
Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali in January 2011 - stands accused by its opponents of 
failing to rein in radical Islamists in the country.

Since coming to power, it has faced growing unrest - particularly among the 
youth - over a faltering economy and a rising radical Islamist movement.

The Ennahda-led coalition faced mass street protests after the 25 July killing 
of MP Mohamed Brahmi, the leader of the small left-wing Popular Movement party.

In February, the government led by Islamist Hamadi Jebali was brought down 
after prominent secular opposition leader Chokri Belaid was also assassinated.

Police later said the two men were killed by the same gun.

BBC

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