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  2. Ooredoo Tunisia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ooredoo_Tunisia

    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]

  3. Ooredoo Tunisia; Orange Tunisia; T. Tunisie Telecom This page was last edited on 5 January 2020, at 02:02 (UTC). ...

  4. Telecommunications in Tunisia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telecommunications_in_Tunisia

    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] ...

  5. List of mobile network operators in the Middle East and Africa

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mobile_network...

    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).

  6. Ooredoo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ooredoo

    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.

  7. Tunisian Internet Agency - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tunisian_Internet_Agency

    The ATI can thus regulate the entire national network because, except for public ISPs such as Tunisie Telecom, the five private suppliers (Orange Tunisia, 3S Global Net, HexaByte, Ooredoo Tunisia and Topnet) depend on it for the network's management.

  8. Internet in Tunisia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_in_Tunisia

    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]

  9. Telecommunications in Mauritania - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Telecommunications_in...

    Mauritania has three operators, the original monopoly, Mauritel (now owned by Vivendi's Maroc Telecom), Mattel (owned by Tunisie Telecom) and Chinguitel, which will start operations in December 2006. [1] The country only has around 1000 DSL subscribers, and 3000000 internet subscribers in total, out of a population of 4.85 million.