* Unions threaten protests
* Suspect had adopted hardline thinking-ministry
* Attacks have hurt Tunisian economy
 

A Tunisian police officer who was stabbed by a suspected militant died of his wounds on Thursday, and security unions threatened to stage protests if parliament fails to legislate tougher protections for security force personnel.
The suspect, named as Zied Gharbi, was arrested on Wednesday after two policemen suffered knife wounds near the parliament. He shouted "Allahu Akbar" as he stabbed the policeman in the neck, witness and officials said.
The attack was close to the Bardo museum where 21 people, mostly European tourists, were killed in an attack by gunmen in March 2015.
Tunisia suffered two other major attacks that year, one against tourists at the beach resort of Sousse and the other against presidential guards in the capital.
"Our colleague Riadh Barrouta died on Thursday after the terrorist attack in Bardo yesterday," Walid Hkima, a national security spokesman, said.
The attacker was 25 and from Ettadamen, one of the largest, poorest suburbs of Tunis.
The Interior Ministry said Wednesday's attacker had confessed that "he had adopted Takfiri thought three years ago and believes that killing security forces is a form of jihad".
'We will escalate'
Takfiri is a term for a hardliner who labels followers of other schools of Islam unbelievers, often as a justification for fighting them.
Zied Gharbi has no ties with militant groups, but he had been influenced by hardline ideology on the Internet, officials said.
"Initial investigations showed that this terrorist does not belong to any terrorist organisation, he had not received orders from any group," Hkima said.
Security unions said in a joint statement on Thursday they would give the parliament two weeks to approve a new law strengthening punishments for assaults on security forces.
The bill, sent to the parliament two years ago, also aims to give policemen more powers in the face of any possible threat.
"If the parliament will not pass the bill in two weeks, we will stop providing personal protection to political party leaders and will hold protests. We will escalate", the statement added.
Parliament speaker Mohamed Naceur said on Wednesday that the bill should be expedited, but added that a dialogue with civil society should be held to respect human rights and the constitution.
Local and international organisations including Human Rights Watch have rejected the bill, asked to withdraw it from parliament and said it promotes a culture of impunity.
The 2015 attacks severely damaged the economy of the North African country, where tourists visiting its Mediterranean coast are a significant source of revenue. Since then, security has been boosted and authorities have cracked down on militants, dismantling dozens of cells.
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