Tunisian prisons and detention centers are facing the risk of "terrorist" acts, the prison officers union said on Tuesday, with several attacks having reportedly been foiled already.
"The Tunisian authorities have been notified by the international organization Interpol about the existence of a terrorist threat against the prisons," the union's secretary general Olfa Ayar told a news conference.
The intelligence services have already thwarted several planned attacks targeting prisons and prison staff, she said, adding guards had received death threats.
Tunisia's prison service chief Habib Sboui confirmed her claims.
"These threats are illustrated by calls from (al-Qaida-linked Salafist group) Ansar al-Sharia to release its detained members," Sboui told Agence France Presse.
"There is daily coordination between the justice and interior ministries to ensure the security of the detention centers, despite the shortcomings" of those centers, he added.
Tunisian prisons are notoriously overcrowded, with some holding three times as many detainees as they were designed for.
There have been a number of large-scale jailbreaks across the region in past weeks, notably in the Libyan city of Benghazi where nearly 1,300 inmates escaped in late July with the suspected assistance of al-Qaida.
Following a string of attacks blamed on jihadists, Tunisia's Islamist-led government has taken a much tougher stand towards extremist groups like Ansar al-Sharia in recent months after being heavily criticized for complacency towards them.
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