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As of 2005, the network covered 99% of the population. In early-2006, Ooredoo Tunisia launched GPRS and EDGE on the Tunisian market. On 24 May 2012 the company secured licenses to deliver 3G and fixed services. [2] Tunisiana changed its name to Ooredoo Tunisia on 24 April 2014. As of 2015 the CEO of the company was Youssef Al Masri. [3]
The ATI is also the gateway from which all of Tunisia’s eleven Internet service providers (ISPs) lease their bandwidth. Six of these ISPs are public (ATI, INBMI, CCK, CIMSP, IRESA and Defense's ISP); the other five — 3S Global Net, HEXABYTE, TopNet, Tunisia Telecom, Ooredoo Tunisia, and Orange Tunisia — are private. [6]
First radio service began in 1935 in Tunisia. [4]Radio stations: Several state-owned and private radio networks (2012) [5] Radios: 2.06 million (1997) [needs update] ...
The telecom regulator in Burkina Faso is Autorité de régulation des communications électroniques et des postes (ARCEP), [16] the current name of the former Autorité de régulation des communications électroniques (ARCE) and of the previous Autorité de régulation des télécommunications (ARTEL).
[76] [77] [75] Native Réunionese, meanwhile, have emigrated increasingly to Metropolitan France: the number of natives of La Réunion living in Metropolitan France rose from 16,548 at the 1968 census to 92,354 at the 1990 census to 130,662 at the 2019 census, by which date 15.7% of the natives of Réunion lived outside of the department.
Ooredoo QSC [a] [4] (Arabic: أريد; formerly Qtel) is a Qatari multinational telecommunications company headquartered in Doha. Ooredoo provides mobile, wireless, wire line, and content services with market share in domestic and international telecommunication markets, and in business (corporations and individuals) and residential markets.
The Ministry of Communication Technologies and Digital Transformation of Tunisia (Arabic: وزارة تكنولوجيات الاتصال والتحول الرقمي) is a Tunisian cabinet-level governmental agency, in charge of organizing the communications sector of Tunisia.
Tunisie Telecom has an important role in improving the rate of internet penetration in Tunisia, which allowed it to have 140,000 subscribers at the end of April 2008. [3] In 2009, Huawei Marine Networks delivered the HANNIBAL submarine communications cable system for Tunisie Telecom across the Mediterranean Sea to Italy. [4]: 310