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Tunisia attack: Cameron says IS fight 'struggle of our generation'



The fight against Islamic State is "the struggle of our generation", David Cameron has said, as it emerged the British death toll in the Tunisian attack will rise above 30.
Home Secretary Theresa May has laid flowers at the scene of the attack on a beach near Sousse.
A total of 38 people were killed by a gunman with links to Islamic State extremists.
Mr Cameron said IS could be beaten but it would take "a very long time".
The prime minister told BBC Radio 4's Today programme the "absolutely horrific" events had "shocked the whole of the world".
He said IS posed "an existential threat" to the West, and its members in Iraq and Syria were plotting "terrible attacks" on British soil.
Mr Cameron - who will chair another meeting of the Cobra emergency committee on Monday morning - said the UK must have a "full-spectrum response" to the IS threat - including continuing with air strikes.
Asked if British troops were needed on the ground, he added: "Our strategy is to build up local armies. It's much easier to just invade a country... it's easier and faster, but that has consequences."
The PM also said an RAF C17 transport plane would be sent to Tunisia on Monday to help evacuate casualties, and if families wished, aircraft could help return their loved ones' bodies to the UK.
Tunisia beach attack: The victims
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The names of those killed in the attack are slowly emerging. Here's what we know so far about those who lost their lives, as well as those who are injured and missing.
Tributes are continuing to be paid to the British victims, who include three generations of the same family, university graduates and a husband who died trying to shield his wife.
A number of British tourists remain missing, with their relatives continuing to face an agonising wait for news.
The investigation into the Tunisia beach attack has become one of the largest counter-terrorism operations the UK has seen in a decade.
More than 600 officers and staff have been assigned to the operation because of the scale of the attack and its international nature.
In the UK, some 380 officers and staff have been meeting British tourists at airports to gather evidence. On Saturday alone, the police met passengers returning on 27 flights.
Detectives will want copies of any pictures or video from their cameras and phones that will not just record the attack but, potentially, other scenes that may help establish the lead-up to Seifeddine Rezgui opening fire.
Detectives want to build as complete a picture as possible of what happened and they are appealing to anyone who was in Sousse around the time of the attack to get in touch.
Tunisia attack: What can UK police do?
The BBC understands the number of British victims - which currently stands at 15 - will rise to at least 30 once the formal identification process is complete.
Most of the dead have not been officially identified, with most details so far coming from friends and family. Suffolk Police, however, have confirmed that 52-year-old Stuart Cullen, from Lowestoft, was among those who died.
Three Irish people were also killed, along with one Belgian and one German, and Tunisians are also thought to be among the dead. At least 36 people were injured.
It is also understood the process is taking time because of strict Tunisian regulations, including the local coroner's requirement for medical or dental records.
The UK government also suggested officials were having difficulty identifying victims as many were not carrying identification and because the injured were being moved between hospitals.