Yesterday's attack on a bus carrying Tunisia's presidential guards involved about 10 kilograms (22 pounds) of military explosives, the Interior Ministry said.
The blast rattled the country after a particularly violent year. If the Islamic State group was indeed behind it, it is the latest of several major attacks in Europe and the Mideast seeding terror well beyond its base in Syria and Iraq.
Tunisian authorities discovered the body of a 13th person in the bus, believed to be the "terrorist who caused the explosion," the Interior Ministry said in a statement Wednesday.
The government declared the blast a terrorist attack and imposed a 30-day nationwide state of emergency, with troops fanned out across the capital.
The Islamic State group issued a statement posted online Wednesday saying a militant it identified as Abu Abdullah al-Tunisi carried out the attack after infiltrating the bus and killing around 20 "apostates."
Earlier this year, the country suffered two major attacks by Islamic extremists that targeted tourist sites.
The US State Department denounced the attack and the UN Security Council pledged support for Tunisia's young democracy.
Iyad Madani, secretary general of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation the world's largest bloc of Muslim-majority countries strongly condemned the attack.
In a statement today, Madani expressed his solidarity with Tunisia and said such acts of terrorism are seeking to alter the country's "moderation and tolerance-driven model of society.
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