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Algeria and the Tunisia are both predominantly Muslim nations in North Africa. Both countries have historic dynasties primarily focused in Algiers and Tunis that became specialized in piracy and global trade.
The Banque de l'Algérie (French pronunciation: [bɑ̃k də lalʒeʁi]), from 1949 to 1958 Banque de l'Algérie et de la Tunisie ([-e də la tynizi]), was a French bank created in 1851, that operated as the central bank for French Algeria and, from 1904, also for the French protectorate of Tunisia until Tunisian independence. [1]
On October 20, 2018, Algérie Poste, in partnership with cell phone operator Djezzy, launched the Flexy electronic credit top-up service via ATMs and the internet. [4] In June 2019, Algérie Poste launches the instant money transfer service between private individuals. Hawalatic is a secure electronic money transfer service. [5]
Algerian Party for Democracy and Socialism (Parti Algérien pour la Démocratie et le Socialisme) Algerian Popular Movement (MPA) The Cause (Essabil) National Republican Alliance (ANR) Natural Law Party (Parti de la Loi Naturelle) National Party for Solidarity and Development (PNSD)
Map of Morice Line. The Morice Line was a defensive line which went into effect in September 1957 during the Algerian War.It was constructed under French authority to prevent supplies reaching the rebel guerrillas of the Algerian National Liberation Front in the then French-controlled Algeria, from the neighbouring country of Tunisia. [1]
It was established following Algerian independence in 1962 by Seghir Mostefai, expert for the "Exécutif provisoire" and member of the Algerian delegation at Evian negotiations, to take over the former activities in the country of the Banque de l'Algérie, the colonial central bank of French Algeria.
Les chambres closes : Histoire d'une prostituée juive d'Algérie. Nouveau Monde Editions. ISBN 9782847362497. ASIN 2847362495. Dunne, Bruce W. (1994). "French Regulation of Prostitution in Nineteenth-Century Colonial Algeria". The Arab Studies Journal. 2 (1): 24– 30. JSTOR 27933632. Taraud, Christelle (2003).