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Société Nouvelle Maison de la Ville de Tunis, or SNMVT Monoprix (مونوبري), is a chain of grocery stores in Tunisia, with its head office in Mégrine. [3] They are operated by the Groupe Mabrouk, which in 2007 had a 38% marketshare in Tunisia. [4]
In a landmark legal case that challenged the Web filtering regime in the country, journalist and blogger Ziad El Hendi filed a legal suit against the Tunisian Internet Agency (ATI) for censoring social networking site Facebook. Facebook was blocked on August 18, 2008, then unblocked on September 2 at the Tunisian President's request.
The Tunisian Beverage Manufacturing Company (French: Société de fabrication des boissons de Tunisie, SFBT), known as the Tunis Frigorific and Brewery Company until 2012, is a Tunisian food industry group focused on four main products.
Production is 600 units per year. [2] Wallyscar vehicles are mostly used and present in Africa, Europe and the Middle East. [1] The company sells in Panama, France, Spain, Qatar and Morocco. [1] Wallyscar cooperates with the French automobile company Peugeot, using a PSA 1.4-litre petrol engine in their vehicles. [3] The company was founded by ...
El Watania 1, also known as Télévision Tunisienne 1, is the first Tunisian public national television channel. It is owned and operated by Télévision Tunisienne (formerly ERTT).
[2] After a year off, the race returned in 1931 at a new venue, a much larger triangular highway circuit laid out between the then separate cities of Tunis and Carthage . [ 3 ] The 1931 season-opening race was much more serious in its entry with eleven European grand prix and 16 1.5-litre cars racing with the smaller motor cycle-powered cars ...
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]
In 1963, the Banque de Tunisie took over the branches of Société Générale in Tunis and Sfax, in exchange for a 17.5% stake. Other European and American banks subsequently acquired minority stakes in the Banque de Tunisie. [1]: 132 In 1968, it acquired the former Tunisian operation of France's Compagnie Algérienne. [5]