lots of weapons in libya this is also dangerous who are against after you. do not want. to be in power so this would be a very dangerous situation for libya and also for neighboring tunisia. is worried about the what about egypt is egypt the biggest supporter of how to or egypt is a very strong supporter of have to there s also the united arab emirates who have been backing after in the last few years with money and with military. equipment. and there are also european supporters of have started like france that they want. to to come to an agreement with the un backed government there is should be elections there should have been elections in two thousand and eighteen already in december but this is it didn t work out there was against it and now they re trying to hold elections again in two thousand and nineteen now after these developments
with just days to finalize a nuclear deal. both say more work is needed to iron out differences on remaining issues. iran and five other world powers have until tuesday to negotiate a deal in exchange for sanctions relief. joining us now is nick robertson. he s live in vienna. let s discuss the latest. i want to throw out the context for this nick which is so incredibly important. you just heard the report on the suicide bombing in kuwait following up from one in saudi, of course in france. we saw a terror attack and here indeed in tunisia. we are clearly aware of the growing shia-sunni rift across the arab region and you got this as the context for these talks in iran libya, syria, iraq for example. how does that influence what s going on if at all
heavily, and i was laying in her blood, trying to keep her awake. she drifted off and i witnessed it. in another room we meet this ukrainian. like some of the injured, she s still wearing a bracelet that shows she s a guest of the hotel. she says the impact felt like a kick. she tied a towel around her leg and tried to hide in the sand. belgian claude pisare says he was close to the gunman but remembers little about him. he was too scared. this is the x-ray. you can see the round and where it s hit the bone breaking it. claude usually visits tunisia
twice a year but no more. he says he s sorry for his tunisian friends, they are good people but it s too dangerous and he thinks it s going to stay that way for a long time. phil black, cnn, tunisia. local tunisians filled the streets outside this hotel behind me denouncing friday s terror attack on saturday. the prime minister has announced a crackdown on what he calls illegal mosques. i want to bring in terrorism expert who is the international security director of the asia-pacific foundation joining me live via skype in london. at the end of the road there is in security. there is none on friday or saturday when the media arrived. there is at least a show of force in this town where this terrible crime was committed. but your thoughts on what the
of the hotel in tunisia where a gunman went on a shooting rampage killing at least 38 people. now the attack on this hotel behind me the imperial left this country fleeing this country last night. we saw demonstrators denouncing this attack and demanding better security. we ll have a lot more in a moment including lives lost in tunisia and now those visiting are trying to cope. i want to get to some breaking news out of athens where the greek parliament has approved a bailout referendum set for july 5th. that is almost a week after tuesday s deadline for what is a near $1.8 billion debt payment to the international monetary fund. that payment is most likely in jeopardy after debt extension talks with its creditors broke down on saturday. now the result a very real concern that banks in greece may