الأربعاء 17 ذو 
القعدة 1433هـ - 03 
أكتوبر 2012م
Maghreb becoming a `terrorist' hub: Tunisia president
Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki estimated that there were around 3,000 
Islamist militants in his country. (AFP)      

AFP, TUNIS

Jihadists pose a "great danger" to the Maghreb region, which is turning into a 
"terrorist" hub, Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki warned in an interview with 
Arabic daily Al-Hayat published Tuesday. "We can say that the center for a 
group of jihadists -- the so-called terrorist movement -- is moving right now 
from Afghanistan and Pakistan to the Arab Maghreb region and there is great 
danger on our doorstep," Marzouki said. "There is a security problem that 
threatens the whole Maghreb region," he told the paper in New York, during a 
visit to the United Nations. He estimated that there were around 3,000 Islamist 
militants in his country. In Tunisia, "the number of active (jihadists) who 
pose a danger is estimated by the police at around three thousand. They are all 
known and identified," Marzouki said. Islamist radicals angered by a U.S.-made 
film mocking Islam attacked the US embassy in Tunis and an adjacent American 
school last month, in a day of violence that left four people dead and dozens 
wounded. German Chancellor Angela Merkel has since cancelled a planned trip to 
Tunisia next month, amid reported security concerns. Tunisian police have been 
searching for Salafist leaders in connection with the embassy attack, notably 
Seif Allah Ibn Hussein, also known as Abu Iyadh, who heads the hardline group 
Ansar al-Sharia and has managed to escape arrest several times. "I ask why Abu 
Iyadh has not been arrested until now," said Marzouki, a veteran human rights 
activist with Tunisia's center-left CPR party, in an apparent swipe at the 
government dominated by the CPR's Islamist allies Ennahda. The ruling Islamist 
party has been strongly criticized for failing to clamp down on Tunisia's 
Muslim extremists, who have carried out numerous acts of violence since last 
year's revolution that ousted former strongman Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. 
Ennahda's veteran leader Rached Ghannouchi said, in an interview with AFP last 
month, that the extremists were a danger "to public freedom in the country and 
to its security."

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