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Tanger City Center has two hotels (rated 4 and 5 stars) operated by the Hilton chain, with a capacity of roughly 500 rooms. It also offers an 800-unit residential complex, joined by office space as well as a shopping and leisure centre that can accommodate more than 100 different businesses, including a seven screen cinema complex.
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Tangier-Tetouan-Al Hoceima (Arabic: طنجة - تطوان - الحسيمة, romanized: ṭanja - tiṭwān - al-ḥusayma) is the northernmost of the twelve regions of Morocco. It covers an area of 15,090 km 2 and recorded a population of 3,556,729 in the 2014 Moroccan census. [1] [2] The capital of the region is Tangier. [3]
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In 1905 the first Moroccan newspaper, Lisan al-Maghrib ("The Voice of Morocco"), was established in Tangiers on the order of Sultan Abdelaziz, partly with the aim of counteracting the views expressed by al-Sa'adah, an Arabic newspaper established in 1904 or 1905 by the French embassy in the city.
Banque Populaire de Nador - Al Hoceima, part of BCP Group; Banque Populaire d'Oujda, part of BCP Group; Banque Populaire de Rabat-Kénitra, part of BCP Group; Banque Populaire de Tanger-Tétouan, part of BCP Group; CDG Capital, part of the state-owned Caisse de Dépôt et de Gestion (CDG) Group; Crédit Agricole du Maroc (CAM), state-owned; CFG ...
The Kasbah Palace, also known as Dar al-Makhzen, Sultan's Palace or Governor's Palace and formerly as the Sharifian Palace, [1]: 650 is a historical building and museum in the Kasbah or citadel of Tangier, Morocco. Its site has long been the main seat of political power in Tangier.
The Petit Socco was the hub of information in diplomatic-era Tanger, with the post offices (also offering telegraphy services) of the four most intrusive nations on each of its sides by the early 20th century: British to the north (between the Café Central and the then Bristolhotel), Spanish to the east, German to the south, and French to the ...