Tunisian Prime Minister Ali Larayedh (C) talks to journalists when he visits the officer injured in clashes with an armed group in the northwestern province of Gobellat, at a hospital in Tunis, capital of Tunisia, Oct. 18, 2013. On Thursday, an attack on a security patrol in Gobellat killed two officers from Tunisian National Guard and severely injured another. The Tunisian presidency office on Friday declared Oct. 19 as a national mourning day for the two officers killed in clashes. (Xinhua)
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Tunisia declares national mourning day for death of two officers
TUNIS, Oct. 18 (Xinhua) -- The Tunisian presidency office on Friday declared Oct. 19 as a national mourning day for two officers killed in clashes with an armed group in the northwestern province of Gobellat.
On Thursday, an attack on a security patrol in Gobellat killed the two officers from Tunisian National Guard and severely injured another. Security reinforcements have since been sweeping the frontier zone between Tunisia and Algeria. Full story
Tunisian Prime Minister Ali Larayedh (2nd L) visits the officer injured in clashes with an armed group in the northwestern province of Gobellat, at a hospital in Tunis, capital of Tunisia, Oct. 18, 2013. On Thursday, an attack on a security patrol in Gobellat killed two officers from Tunisian National Guard and severely injured another. The Tunisian presidency office on Friday declared Oct. 19 as a national mourning day for the two officers killed in clashes. (Xinhua)
An officer injured in clashes with an armed group in the northwestern province of Gobellat, is seen at a hospital in Tunis, capital of Tunisia, Oct. 18, 2013. On Thursday, an attack on a security patrol in Gobellat killed two officers from Tunisian National Guard and severely injured another. The Tunisian presidency office on Friday declared Oct. 19 as a national mourning day for the two officers killed in clashes. (Xinhua)