THE Prime Minister has announced that a permanent memorial for the 30 British victims of the Tunisia terror attack is to be created.

David Cameron has announced that plans for a memorial to the victims of the deadliest terrorist attack on Britons since 7/7 will be developed over the upcoming months.

Victims of the attack on Friday June 26 includes John and Janet Stocker whose Crawley family launched an online campaign for information in the wake of the attack.

Over the coming months, bereaved relatives of the holidaymakers killed by a lone gunman in the Tunisian resort of Sousse will be consulted on the memorial's location and design.

National newspaper reports have suggested that the memorial will be based in the north of England where the majority of victims lived.

Foreign office minister Tobias Ellwood, whose brother was killed in the 2002 Bali bombing, has been appointed by the Prime Minister to meet with relatives and discuss suitable locations for the memorial.

A second site of remembrance will be established for all British nationals who have been killed in atrocities overseas.

Both memorials will be funded through fines levied on banks by the Financial Conduct Authority.

A remembrance service for the victims will be held in the autumn.

Mr Cameron said: "It is right that we mark and commemorate them and others murdered by terrorists overseas appropriately, and support the loved ones they have left behind in every way we can."

The RAF has now completed their operation to repatriate the dead from Tunisia with the final five bodies returned to RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire over the weekend.