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System: Above the African average and continuing to be upgraded; key centers are Sfax, Sousse, Bizerte, and Tunis; telephone network is completely digitized [3] domestic: trunk facilities consist of open-wire lines, coaxial cable, and microwave radio relay
Tunisie Telecom became a European telecoms operator with its 60% share purchase of the Maltese telecommunications company GO from the Emirati EIT for €200 million in June 2016. [ 5 ] In December 2021, the Malagasy group Axian, led by Hassanein Hiridjee , made the highest bid among potential buyers for Mauritanian telecom operator Mattel, a ...
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The 1987 Tunisian coup d'état involved the bloodless ousting of the aging President of Tunisia Habib Bourguiba on 7 November 1987, and his replacement as President by his recently appointed Prime Minister, Zine El Abidine Ben Ali. [1]
As of October 2024, Tunisair is owned 64,86% by the Tunisian state, 9.56% by three state-owned national funds (CNSS, CNRPS, CNAM) , and 5,58% by Air France. [29] The remaining 20% of the stake is floated under the ticker TAIR.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Tunisia seeks to implement the government's foreign policy in conformity with the policies fixed by the head of state establishing, maintaining and developing Tunisia's partnership with foreign states and international institutions and organizations in the political, economic, social and cultural spheres.
The Banque Internationale Arabe de Tunisie was founded by Mansour Moalla in 1976, [7] as a result of a merger of the Tunisian branches of the Société Marseillaise de Crédit and the British Bank of the Middle East. [8] It is headquartered in Tunis, Tunisia. [1] It has 185 offices in Tunisia and 1 office in Libya. [1]
La Presse de Tunisie was founded in 1934 [2] by Henri Smadja, a Tunisian and French Jewish doctor and lawyer, born in Tunisia, who became the owner of the daily newspaper Combat. The paper, based in Tunis, [3] was close to the Constitutional Democratic Rally. [1] Its sister paper is Arabic newspaper Assahafah. [2]