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29 Jun, 2015 09:52

Cameron vows ‘full spectrum’ British response to ISIS Tunisia shooting

Cameron vows ‘full spectrum’ British response to ISIS Tunisia shooting

Prime Minister David Cameron has promised a “full spectrum” British response to the Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) shooting at a Tunisian hotel which killed at least 38 people.

Cameronsaid the government and Foreign Office are working “as fast as we can”to identify British victims and notify families involved.

An RAF C17 plane is being deployed to aid stranded British tourists and possibly repatriate victims’ bodies.

The Prime Minister spoke in Parliament on Monday afternoon. He told MPs that there would be a major counter-terror training exercise in London within the next few days and that it was important that people carried on with their daily lives.

He added there was no evidence that the three attacks on Friday in Tunisia, Kuwait and France were coordinated, and said the government currently had 50 people on the ground in Tunisia providing assistance to British nationals.

Speaking to the BBC earlier he said:“I am keen that, as a nation, we show respect and our condolences ... and if [the families] would like for us to try and bring back the bodies of their loved ones with dignity and respect that is something we can do,” the told the Today program.

He further implored the public to stop referring to the extremists as “Islamic State.”

READ MORE: Thousands of Britons flee Tunisia as beach shooting death toll mounts

“I wish the BBC would stop calling it ‘Islamic State’ because it is not an Islamic state.”

“What it is is an appalling barbarous regime that is a perversion of the religion of Islam and many Muslims listening to this program will recoil every time they hear the words.”

Cameron added that the “poisonous death cult” was “seducing too many young minds in Europe, in America, in the Middle East and elsewhere and this is going to be the struggle of our generation and we have to fight it with everything we can.”

“There are people in Iraq and Syria who are plotting to carry out terrible acts in Britain and elsewhere and as long as ISIL exists in those two countries we are at threat,” he said.

READ MORE: A year of terror: ISIS kills over 3,000 in Syria since declaring ‘caliphate’ – report

The PM will chair another meeting of the emergency committee COBRA on Monday afternoon to discuss Britain’s response to the massacre.

Some 15 British citizens have been unofficially identified among the dead, but the total is likely to rise to more than 30 over the course of the next few days.

“This is an absolutely horrific attack and I know it has shocked the whole of the country. It has shocked the whole of the world,” Cameron said.

We are not going to engage with people who believe there ought to be a caliphate and women should be subjugated.”

When asked whether British Muslims needed to be tougher on extremists, he replied, “My point is some organizations set themselves up as representative of Muslim communities when actually they are not. Do not treat them as spokespeople for all of the community.”

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