The Latest: Germany says 1 citizen killed in Tunisia attack
Germany's foreign minister says one German citizen has been confirmed killed and another wounded in the attack at a beach resort in Tunisia.
A hotel employee in Tunisia says the gunman who killed 38 people also used grenades as he moved methodically from the beach to the pool area and into the lobby.
Tobias Ellwood, a senior Foreign Office official, said Saturday that it was "the most significant terrorist attack on the British people" since July 7, 2005, when suicide bombers struck the London transport network, killing 52 people and wounding hundreds of others.
Ireland's foreign minister says the government suspects that two other Irish citizens are among the dead in Tunisia in addition to nurse Lorna Carty.
A major German tour operator says more than 300 customers who had planned to travel to Tunisia this summer have called asking to change their bookings, most of them seeking to change destinations.
A scattering of foreign tourists are still wading in the sea on the beach in front of the hotel in Tunisia where a gunman killed 38 people before he was killed by police.
The director of the Enfidha-Hammamet airport in Tunisia says it has set up special procedures to accommodate the flood of passengers seeking to leave the country after the terror attack that left 39 people dead, including the gunman.
A spokesman for the Health Ministry says a total of 39 people were wounded in the attack at a Tunisian beach resort, including 21 who have already left the hospital.
A German government statement says Merkel offered her condolences to President Beji Caid Essebsi in a phone call Saturday following the attack by a gunman in a Tunisian beach resort that left 39 people dead.
The statement says Germany will concentrate on support to secure Tunisia's borders, without giving details, and noted that Essebsi had raised that wish when he attended the Group of Seven summit in Germany earlier this month.
France's foreign mi