Tunisia's Tourism Minister, Salma Rekik Elloumi (R), lays a wreath of flowers on the beach on June 26, 2016, during a ceremony in memory of those killed a year ago by a jihadist gunman in front of the Riu Imperial Marhaba Hotel in Port el Kantaoui, on the outskirts of Sousse south of the capital Tunis. Tourists fled in horror on June 26, 2015 as a Tunisian gunman pulled a Kalashnikov rifle from inside a furled beach umbrella and went on a shooting spree outside the five-star hotel. 30 Britons were among 38 foreign holidaymakers killed in the attack. / AFP PHOTO / FETHI BELAID

Tunisia held a minute’s silence Sunday marking one year since a seaside attack claimed by the Islamic State (ISIS) group that killed 38 tourists including 30 Britons in the North African country.

Tunisia’s Tourism Minister Selma Elloumi Rekik and British Foreign Office official Tobias Ellwood laid down flowers to remember the victims of the shooting in the town of Port El Kantaoui south of the capital.

A priest then called out the names of the victims under the watchful eye of security forces, who were out in high numbers for the occasion.

Hotel employees as well as diplomats from Germany, Portugal, Ireland, Belgium and Russia — whose countries also lost victims in the attack — also attended the ceremony.

Tourists fled in horror on June 26 last year, as a Tunisian gunman pulled a Kalashnikov rifle from inside a furled beach umbrella and went on a shooting spree outside a five-star hotel near the city of Sousse.

Tunisia, the birthplace of the Arab Spring, has suffered from a wave of jihadist violence since the 2011 revolution that ousted longtime dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali.

The beach bloodbath was the second of two deadly jihadist attacks that dealt heavy blows to the country’s vital tourism sector last year, following four years of decline due to political instability.

The shooting came just months after 21 tourists and a policeman were killed in another attack at the Bardo National Museum in Tunis. Both were claimed by ISIS.

In November, a suicide bombing in the capital — also claimed by the jihadist group — killed 12 members of the presidential guard.

The authorities implemented a state of emergency, which remains in place after it was extended for the fourth time on Monday.