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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]
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 having disappeared. Achille Varzi in a back-door works Bugatti T51 won on the debut of the new car and Varzi's first race in a Bugatti, ahead of Luigi Fagioli in a works Maserati ...
The 1933 Tunis Grand Prix was a Grand Prix motor race held at the Carthage Street Circuit in Tunis, the capital of colonial Tunisia, on 26 March 1933. Tazio Nuvolari won the 37 lap race, driving for Scuderia Ferrari, Alfa Romeo's works team, while his teammate, Baconin Borzacchini, finished second.
In 2020, Aramis Group generated a revenue of 1.1 billion euros, sold 66,000 vehicles to individuals, had 1,400 employees, a network of 60 agencies, and three industrial refurbishment sites. [16] On June 18, 2021, Aramis Group went public and raised c. 250 million euros to accelerate its international expansion in Europe.
Ooredoo Tunisia started commercial operations on 27 December 2002. Six months later, its mobile phone network covered 60% of the Tunisian population. As of June 30, 2006, it had more than 2.5 million subscribers and has now more than 5 million subscribers.
Line Stations Geographical coordinates Delegation P+R Correspondences Place de la République: Bab el Bhar • Nelson-Mandela Bab el Bhar • Mohammed-V
On 4 July 2024 the ISIE announced changes to the rules regulating candidates to the presidential elections by issuing Ordinance 544 in which they raised the age limit of presidential candidates to 40 years old compared to the age limit of 35 years old currently enacted by the electoral law as well as adding other constraining requirements ...
Tunisia was upgraded to "Partly Free" after the revolution (often associated with the so-called Arab Spring, with its political rights rating improved from 7 to 3 (with 7 the worst and 1 the best) and its civil liberties rating going from 5 to 4. [1] As of 2016, Tunisia has been upgraded to "Free"—the only Arab country to receive this rating. [2]