The Bardo Museum in Tunsia after the attack in 2015. The man - identified only as Haykel S., 36, by local media - has been named in Tunisia as a suspect behind the Bardo Museum attack that killed 21 foreign tourists and a police officer. A Frankfurt court said Wednesday it had rejected a last-ditch asylum request, but set conditions for his deportation. Two days later German immigration authorities rejected the asylum request as unfounded, a decision the man then appealed. Last December, another Tunisian rejected asylum seeker, Anis Amri, committed Germany's worst jihadist attack so far, ploughing a truck through a Berlin Christmas market and taking 12 lives.
Source: The Local April 06, 2017 07:07 UTC