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The Kissariat al-Kifah (Arabic: قيسارية الكفاح) or Kissaria (القيسارية) is the historic central bazaar of Fes el-Bali, the historic old city of Fez, Morocco. It is located between the Zawiya of Moulay Idris II and the Qarawiyyin Mosque .
List of television channels in Morocco. ... This page was last edited on 24 July 2024, at 03:14 ... 2 languages ...
Morocco was a pioneer in the television field in the Middle East. In the 1950s, the country had a first experience undertaken by a French company, known as TELMA, who saw in the European community in Morocco a potential audience. In 1951, the authorization of broadcasting was ceded to TELMA, which did not begin to transmit until February 1954.
According to the ITU, Morocco has 20,535,174 Internet users, or a 58.3% [1] penetration rate as of June 2017. [2] This includes 12 million Facebook users. [3] Between 2013 and 2014, the Moroccan Internet population grew by 1 million. [4] As of 2015, 94.1% of Moroccan netizens use mobile devices to access the Internet. [4]
2M is a Moroccan free-to-air television network.It was established by the royal-owned conglomerate, ONA, before being sold to, in part, the Moroccan government.Of 2M, 45.3% is owned by Bank of Africa, [3] while approximately 32.5% by the Moroccan government, Al Mada (12%), with the remaining shares being owned by Atlas Capital, (10.2%).
The Central Market (Arabic: السوق المركزي, French: Marché Central) in Casablanca, Morocco is a marketplace with historical and cultural significance. It is located on Muhammad V Boulevard , among the colonial architecture of the 20th century, facing the Central Market Tramway Station.
SNRT Radio National (الإذاعة الوطنية) is a Moroccan radio channel operated by the state-owned public-broadcasting organization SNRT and specializing in news, sports, talk programmes, and popular music, broadcast from Rabat called in Arabic AL-IDAA ALWATANIA MAGHREBIA mean Moroccan National Radio.
Internet censorship in Morocco was listed as selective in the social, conflict/security, and Internet tools areas and as no evidence in the political area by the OpenNet Initiative (ONI) in August 2009. [1] Freedom House listed Morocco's "Internet Freedom Status" as "Partly Free" in its 2018 Freedom on the Net report. [2]