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La Presse de Tunisie (French, daily, state-owned) [1] Le Maghreb (daily) [1] Le Temps (daily) [1] Electronic only. AlKabar Plus; Kapitalis [1] Business News;
The 217 members of the Assembly of the Representatives of the People were previously elected by closed list proportional representation in 33 multi-member constituencies (27 in Tunisia and 6 representing Tunisian expatriates) with seats allocated using the largest remainder method and a mandated zipper system: alternating female and male candidates on the list, and a male and female candidate ...
3 1 13 7 +6 24 [a] Qualification for the Champions League: 2 US Monastir: 10 3 5 2 8 5 +3 16 [b] 3 CS Sfaxien: 10 2 6 2 6 5 +1 13 [c] Qualification for the Confederation Cup: 4 Stade Tunisien: 10 1 8 1 5 5 0 13 [b] 5 Étoile du Sahel: 10 0 7 3 4 7 −3 10 [a] 6 Club Africain: 10 1 5 4 4 11 −7 9 [c]
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 ). Formerly named RTT (1966–1983), RTT 1 (1983–1992), TV7 (1992–1997), Tunis 7 (1997–2008), Tunisie 7 (2008–2011), it has been known as El Watania 1 since 2011.
La Dépêche tunisienne was established in 1892 [1] when the country was under the French protectorate. [2] It was the first newspaper which was published regularly in Tunisia. [1] Most literate French people in Tunisia at this time bought the paper. [3]
French programming from France 2 continued to be aired until the end of October 1999. [3] The two channels later changed their names several times and are currently El Watania 1 and El Watania 2 since 2011. From 2008, Tunisia began preparing its transition from analogue to digital television and the definitive switch takes place on 17 September ...
Parliamentary elections were held in Tunisia on 26 October 2014. [1] Campaigning started on 4 October 2014. [2] They were the first free regular legislative elections since independence in 1956, and the first elections held following the adoption of the new constitution in January 2014, which created a 217-seat Assembly of the Representatives of the People. [3]
A model attribution edit summary is Content in this edit is translated from the existing French Wikipedia article at [[:fr:Élections législatives tunisiennes de 2019]]; see its history for attribution. You may also add the template {{Translated|fr|Élections législatives tunisiennes de 2019}} to the talk page.