Security remains heightened around the museum while the army has been deployed to large cities
The
president of Tunisia, Beji Caid Essebsi, is to address the nation, two
days after an attack on the Bardo museum in the capital Tunis killed 23
people, mostly foreign tourists.
The address comes on the day that marks 59 years of Tunisia's
independence from France and following Wednesday's attack security has
been heightened across the country. Islamic State has said it was behind the attack.
Nine people have been arrested since.
The presidency said four of those arrested were directly linked to the attack and five had "ties to the cell".
Demonstrations have taken place outside the museum for a second day
Some Tunisian tourist guides shouted slogans and waved banners saying "We are Bardo" in French.
Tourists from cruise ship groups caught up in the terror attack have arrived in Spanish ports
The BBC's Fergal Keane: "47 people are still being treated in hospital"
Belgian tourist Karin Dons said she was not at the museum at the time of the attack but heard the shootings. She said she did not realize what had happened until she returned to the ship and saw the reports on television.
"Then you realize [what] you escaped from but other people were not lucky,'' she said after leaving the ship in Barcelona.
At Tunis' Charles Nicolle hospital, victims' families are arriving continued to arrive to help identify the dead and recover their bodies.
Sally Adey was among the victims
- Twenty of the dead were foreigners
- Seventeen were cruise ship tourists
- The authorities say the victims include four Italians, three Japanese and three French nationals, two Spanish, two Colombians and one each from Britain, Poland and Belgium
- The nationalities of three victims remain unconfirmed
- The British woman was a 57-year-old mother from Shropshire
- Italian media say one of the Italian victims was Francesco Caldara, on his first cruise, accompanying his girlfriend on a birthday trip
- French media have named two of the French nationals as Jean-Claude Tissier, 72, and Christophe Tinois, 59
A worker from the parliament building next to the attacked museum tells BBC News of the horror Tunis had witnessed
He told the el-Hiwar el-Tounsi TV channel that authorities did not have details about where or with which group they had trained.
The men were killed as security forces stormed the museum.
French Interior Minister Bernard Cazeneuve is travelling to Tunis on a pre-scheduled visit coinciding with the country's Independence Day holiday.
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