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Since the Unification of Italy, there has been a considerable migration of Italians to Tunisia. [2] Today in Tunisia there are a lot of Italian communities. Conversely, the presence of Tunisians in Italy dates back to the 1980s. In Tunisia the economic and political crisis is relevant. The year 2015 was marked by terrorist attacks. [3]
Maritime boundary between Italy and Tunisia. The map clearly shows the circle sectors intersecting each other and the median line between Sicily and Tunisia. The Italy–Tunisia Delimitation Agreement is a 1971 treaty between Italy and Tunisia in which the two countries agreed to delimit a maritime boundary between them in the continental shelf ...
Greece has an embassy in Tunis. Tunisia has an embassy in Athens. Italy: 20 June 1956: See Italy–Tunisia relations. Both countries established diplomatic relations on 20 June 1956. [147] Italy has an embassy in Tunis. Tunisia has an embassy in Rome, a consulate-general in Palermo and consulates in Genoa, Milan and Naples. Malta: 21 December 1967
Italy on Friday signed a deal to take in some 4,000 workers from Tunisia, in line with pledges to help the northern African state stem the pressure from migrants at its borders. The deal was ...
Days after Tunisia's president insisted that he remains unwilling to let Europe outsource migration problems to his country, Italy's prime minister acknowledged Wednesday that the North African ...
Italian Tunisians (Italian: Italo-tunisini, or Italians of Tunisia) are Tunisian-born citizens who are fully or partially of Italian descent, whose ancestors were Italians who emigrated to Tunisia during the Italian diaspora, or Italian-born people in Tunisia.
Tunisia on Monday announced it would reject an installment of funds sent by Europe to help the debt-ridden country patrol the Mediterranean Sea as migrant boat crossings spike to levels not seen ...
The Greeks arrived later, coming to (what is now) southern France, southern Italy including Sicily, and eastern Libya. Earlier the Phoenicians had settled in (what is now) Sardinia, Spain, Morocco, Algeria, Sicily, and Tunisia. In Tunisia the city of Carthage was founded, which would come to rule all the other Phoenician settlements. [53]