TUNIS, Tunisia — Gunmen ambushed a Tunisian army patrol Monday in a mountainous border region known as an Islamic militant stronghold, killing at least eight soldiers, the presidential spokesman said.
Jebel Chaambi, Tunisia's highest mountain at 1,500 meters (5,000 feet), is located near the Algerian border and the city of Kasserine, and was the site of an intensive military hunt for an al-Qaida-linked militant group during the spring.
"An entire patrol carrying out a search operation in this mountainous region was decimated," said presidential spokesman Adnan Mancer, adding that his information came from the defense ministry.
Mohammed Sghayer Hamzaoui of the Kasserine hospital emergency unit told The Associated Press that nine soldiers were killed and four were wounded. The discrepancy could not immediately be explained.
Radio Mosaique FM added that three of the dead had their throats cut and that the attackers made off with the soldiers' weapons.
Mancer said reinforcements have been sent to the region, which the army had announced was cleared of militants on June 24 after a two-month operation that cost three lives, wounded 27 people and set off almost a dozen road side bombs.
In 2011, Tunisians kicked off the Arab Spring pro-democracy uprisings in the region by overthrowing long-reigning dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. But since then, politics have been fractious here, with a moderate Islamist party winning elections but alienating many other groups along the way.
The attack comes just five days after a left-wing politician was shot dead in front of his house by an alleged Islamic militant.