The Bardo museum in Tunis has reopened for officials, almost a week after 20 foreign tourists were killed in a militant attack. But it will remain shut to the public until Saturday. <br /><br /> Tourists were allowed to gather around the main gates, with police standing guard. <br /><br /> “We decided not to cancel our trip and today we’ve even decided to change our itinerary to come and take pictures – and to show our solidarity with Tunisians,” said Rose Marie, a Canadian tourist. <br /><br /> At least two gunmen opened fire on visitors as they got off buses at the museum last Wednesday. ISIL claimed responsibility for the attack. <br /><br /> Security forces later killed two men, who are said to have been recruited at mosques in Tunisia and trained at a jihadist camp in Libya. <br /><br /> It was Tunisia worst attack in more than a decade, testing the country’s young democracy.<br /><br /> Meanwhile, those who work in Tunisia’s tourism industry have joined a march, to also show their solidarity and to remember the victims of the rampage.
