Overblog
Suivre ce blog Administration + Créer mon blog
9 octobre 2013 3 09 /10 /octobre /2013 11:45
Tunisie – Renforts militaires dans le sud tunisien : La version du ministère de la défense

 

 

8 octobre, 2013 tunisienumerique.com

 

Taoufik Rahmouni, porte-parole du ministère de la Défense, a indiqué ce mardi 8 Octobre au micro de Shems FM,  que le déploiement militaire consiste en une opération ordinaire qui rentre dans le cadre de la création d’une zone tampon.

 

Rahmouni a assuré que ce déploiement n’à rien avoir avec les rumeurs qui courent à propos des menaces terroristes au  sud tunisien.

Partager cet article
Repost0
9 septembre 2013 1 09 /09 /septembre /2013 11:45
Tunisie : Pas de création d'une base militaire américaine

07-09-2013 letempsdz.com

 

La Tunisie a démenti vendredi soir la création d'une base militaire américaine sur son territoire. Le porte-parole du ministère tunisien de la Défense, Taoufik Rahmouni a démenti vendredi que l'installation d'une base étrangère ait été envisagée dans le sud tunisien ou en tout point du territoire national, contrairement aux rumeurs dans ce sens qui avaient circulé ces derniers temps. Lors d'un point de presse, il a expliqué que la décision du gouvernement tunisien déclarant zone-tampon une partie du Sahara tunisien faisait suite à l'accroissement des risques sécuritaires, particulièrement les menaces terroristes ainsi que le négoce d'armes et de munitions, le narcotrafic et la contrebande de produits subventionnés.

 

Le ministère tunisien des Affaires étrangères a également démenti «catégoriquement» vendredi, l'existence d'un projet tuniso-américain pour la création d'une base militaire américaine sur le territoire tunisien. Dans un communiqué, le ministère tunisien affirme que les informations qui ont circulé sur les réseaux sociaux et relayées par certains médias à propos d'un projet de création d'une base militaire sont «infondées».

Partager cet article
Repost0
30 août 2013 5 30 /08 /août /2013 07:45
La Tunisie crée des «zones tampons» militaires à ses frontières

29/08/2013 par Nicolas Laffont – 45eNord.ca

 

Des zones militaires tampons dans le sud de la Tunisie. Voilà ce qu’a ordonné de créer la présidence tunisienne ce jeudi 29, pour lutter notamment contre le terrorisme.

 

Dans un communiqué publié sur le site de la présidence tunisienne, le ministre de la Défense nationale Rachid Sabbagh annonce que «la nécessité de la création de ces zones a été dictée par la situation actuelle afin de combattre toutes les menaces pesant sur la Tunisie», citant notamment «le trafic d’armes» et le «terrorisme».

 

Il ne précise cependant pas où exactement dans «le sud de la Tunisie», si ce n’est que ce sera aux frontières avec l’Algérie et la Libye.

 

Le communiqué précise que cette mesure est prévu pour durer une année et que toute personne souhaitant se rendre dans l’une de ces futures zones devra obtenir des autorisations spéciales.

 

Depuis plusieurs mois, les autorités tunisiennes pourchassent un groupe armé lié à Al-Qaïda au Maghreb islamique (Aqmi) à la frontière algérienne. Une quinzaine de militaires tunisiens ont été tués au cours de la traque, dont huit ont été égorgés et mutilés le 29 juillet dernier, près du Mont Chaambi, à la frontière algérienne.

 

De plus, le sud désertique du pays est devenu, de l’aveu même des autorités, une zone privilégiée pour les trafiquants d’armes venant de Libye.

 

La Libye, qui peine à mettre en place une armée et une police depuis la chute en 2011 de Mouammar Kadhafi, a proposé jeudi à la Tunisie de déterminer une «stratégie de sécurité commune destinée à sécuriser» les frontières.

 

Le ministre libyen des Affaires étrangères Mohamed Abdelaziz a dit ainsi vouloir «mettre fin au trafic des produits subventionnés, des armes et à la fuite de terroristes à partir de la Libye vers la Tunisie ou le contraire».

Partager cet article
Repost0
25 juin 2013 2 25 /06 /juin /2013 16:45
Tunisian army chief of staff to leave post

25 June 2013 defenceWeb (Reuters)

 

Tunisian army chief Rachid Ammar abruptly announced his retirement night amid increased political tensions surrounding the country's transition to democracy.

 

"I decided to leave the service under the age limit .. I asked the president on Saturday and he agreed to my departure," Ammar, 65, said in a live television program.

 

Tunisian democracy activists initially hailed the army's role in the revolution that toppled former President Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali in 2011 and inspired revolts across the Arab world, Reuters reports.

 

But public support has waned after the extradition last year of Muammar Gaddafi's prime minister, Baghadi al-Mahmoudi, to Libya. Ammar was accused of having a role in the extradition, which sparked a political crisis in Tunisia over concerns Mahmoudi would not get a fair trial in Libya.

 

Ammar's retirement comes at a sensitive time for the country where the "Arab Spring" was born, with tensions growing between the moderate government and Salafist Muslim activists. The army also recently pursued dozens of suspected al Qaeda-linked militants near the border with Algeria.

Partager cet article
Repost0
8 juin 2013 6 08 /06 /juin /2013 11:45
Tunisie : Les terroristes auraient quitté Jebel Chaambi

 

07.06.2013 Par L'Economiste Maghrébin

 

Le major Mokhtar Ben Nasr, porte-parole officiel du ministère de la Défense, a déclaré  aujourd’hui 7 juin sur Express FM,  que les groupes terroristes retranchés à Jebel Chaambi auraient quitté les lieux, depuis l’explosion de la première mine.

 

Il a par ailleurs évoqué la possibilité qu’ils aient pu bénéficier de soutiens extérieurs pour s’enfuir et se cacher ailleurs.

 

Le porte-parole du ministère de la Défense a souligné que l’armée s’emploie, à l’heure actuelle,  à déminer le site, à le sécuriser définitivement  pour  qu’il ne serve plus de refuge aux terroristes.

 

Revenant sur l’explosion, hier,  de la 5e mine qui a fait deux morts parmi les militaires, Mokhtar Ben Nasr a fait savoir qu’il s’agit d’une mine artisanale, plus puissante que celles qui ont explosé antérieurement, ce qui laisse envisager un « tournant dangereux ».

 

Appelant à l’union sacrée contre le terrorisme, il a fortement nié toute infiltration de l’armée par des éléments acquis aux thèses terroristes, soulignant qu’il s’agit d’une « guerre de longue haleine » et que l’Armée tunisienne est bien outillée et bien formée pour la contrer.

Partager cet article
Repost0
2 juin 2013 7 02 /06 /juin /2013 07:45
Tunisie : 3 soldats blessés par une mine en pourchassant des djihadistes

1 juin 2013 Guysen News International

 

Trois militaires ont été blessés samedi dans l’explosion d’une mine sur le mont Chaambi, à la frontière algérienne où les forces tunisiennes pourchassent un groupe de jihadistes ayant miné la région.

Partager cet article
Repost0
8 mai 2013 3 08 /05 /mai /2013 11:45
Tunisia links two wanted jihadist groups to Al-Qaeda

May 07, 2013 Spacewar.com (AFP)

 

Tunis - Tunisian authorities on Tuesday recognised that two jihadist groups which the army has been hunting on the Algerian border have links to Al-Qaeda, stressing their determination to take them out.

 

"There are two groups, one in the Kef region with around 15 people and the other in Mount Chaambi with around 20 people," interior ministry spokesman Mohamed Ali Aroui told reporters, referring to the groups being pursued by the army since last week.

 

"There is a connection between the two groups, and the one in the Chaambi region has ties with the Okba Ibn Nafaa brigade, which is linked to Al-Qaeda."

 

"We will respond militarily to anyone who takes up arms against the state," Aroui added.

 

Since the revolution in January 2011 that ousted Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, Tunisia has seen a sharp rise in the activity of radical Islamist groups that were suppressed under the former dictator.

 

Those groups have been blamed for a wave of violence, notably an attack on the US embassy last September and the assassination of a leftist opposition leader in February, cases which the ruling Islamist party Ennahda has sought to portray as isolated incidents.

 

The jihadists hiding out in the remote Mount Chaambi region are blamed for an attack on a border post in December that killed a member of the national guard.

 

The army says there have been no direct clashes with the group, but homemade explosive devices they have place in the area have so far wounded 16 members of the security forces involved in the hunt, five of who lost legs.

 

Explosives, coded documents, maps and mobile phones were discovered at a camp used by the group, and the army troops has been using mortar fire to try to demine the area.

 

Aroui said the Chaambi fighters were from "neighbouring countries," notably Algeria, while army sources on the ground have said some were veteran Islamist militants who fought in northern Mali.

 

"They wanted to make Chaambi their base, but we have dismantled it and they no longer have a refuge," said army spokesman Mokhtar Ben Nasr, adding that a search for the second group was launched on Tuesday in Kef, some 100 kilometres (60 miles) to the north.

 

"An extensive search is underway in the Kef and Jendouba mountains," also close to the Algerian border, Ben Nasr said, without elaborating.

 

Tunisia and Algeria share a long, porous border which is often used by smugglers, and the army spokesman said the two countries were cooperating in the hunt for the jihadists.

 

Tunisia's President Moncef Marzouki went to meet the troops involved in the search operations on Tuesday, according to his office.

 

"We are currently experiencing a crisis that requires a national effort," Marzouki's spokesman Adnene Manser told reporters.

 

"We need to have confidence in our army and give it strong support in combating this threat," he said.

 

Tunisia's opposition has strongly criticised the government for failing to catch the jihadists, accusing it of recognising the threat they pose too late, despite the problems they have caused, and condemning the poorly-equipped state of the armed forces.

 

In December, the authorities announced the arrest of 16 militants belonging to the Okba Ibn Nafaa brigade, described as a cell of Al-Qaeda in the Islamic Maghreb (AQIM ), in Tunisia's Kasserine region, where Mount Chaambi is located.

 

But they had not until now confirmed a link between those arrested and the "terrorist group" holed up in the Chaambi region that the security forces have been tracking since the deadly December attack on the border post.

 

The government has in recent months warned of jihadists linked to AQIM infiltrating Tunisia's borders and undermining its stability, especially since their occupation of northern Mali last year.

 

Bolstering those concerns, a leader of Al-Qaeda's north Africa affiliate urged Muslims worldwide to attack French interests in retaliation for France's military intervention in Mali, in a video recorded last month and posted online. There are an estimated 30,000 French citizens living in Tunisia.

Partager cet article
Repost0
7 mai 2013 2 07 /05 /mai /2013 12:45
source leaders.com.tn

source leaders.com.tn

May 7, 2013: Strategy Page

 

In Tunisia a group of fifty or more Islamic terrorists are operating in the Mount Chaambi region near the Algerian border (close to the Kasserine Pass through the Atlas Mountains that stretch across most of the North African coast ). Soldiers and police are searching a hundred square kilometers of sparsely populated forests and mountains without much success. The searchers have found evidence that there is someone up there, but the group has so far managed to avoid detection. This is the first time Tunisia has had to deal with armed Islamic terrorists since 2007.

 

These armed men have been active in the area for at least six months. Soldiers sent to the area have suffered about twenty casualties from booby-traps and handmade landmines left around by the terrorists. A camp found near the top of Mount Chaambi and it contained documents, weapons and equipment indicating the size and origin of the group. This group appears to be well supplied and seems to have enough cash to keep themselves going for a while. Some of these men have recently fled Mali and others are from Algeria. These were joined by a smaller group (a dozen or so) of Tunisian Islamic terrorists who had apparently not been active until joined by all these new men and a few local recruits. Eleven of the 32 terrorists killed nearby in an attack on an Algerian natural gas field in January were Tunisian which provided a hint that there were a lot more Islamic terrorists in Tunisia than the government wanted to admit.

 

There has been one gun battle near Mount Chaambi so far, in which no one was hurt. Police have arrested twenty suspects in the region, but none of these appear to have much knowledge of the Islamic terrorists in the mountains. There appear to be at least two separate armed groups and police are blocking the few roads in the area to try and prevent the terrorists from moving to another part of the country.

 

Tunisia was the first country to carry out an Arab Spring uprising and a new government was installed two years ago. Islamic radicals were released from jail and allowed to operate in the open as long as they did not turn to terrorism or anything illegal inside Tunisia. These radicals have tried, so far without success, to get the new government to establish a religious dictatorship that would enforce Islamic (Sharia) law.

Partager cet article
Repost0

Présentation

  • : RP Defense
  • : Web review defence industry - Revue du web industrie de défense - company information - news in France, Europe and elsewhere ...
  • Contact

Recherche

Articles Récents

Categories