Tunisia Embassy
Bole Kifle Ketama, Kebele 03 House # 0008 | |
P.O. Box: | 100069 |
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia | |
Phone: |
(+251) 11-662-1840 |
Fax: |
(+251) 11-662-1841 |
![Tunisia Embassy Flag](/directory/images/countrymap/1177-flag-Tunisia.gif)
![Tunisia Embassy Map](/directory/images/countrymap/1177-map-Tunisia.gif)
About Tunisia Embassy
Tunisia
Population: |
10,937,521 (July 2014 est.)
|
Location: |
Northern Africa, bordering the Mediterranean Sea, between Algeria and Libya
|
Continent: |
Africa
|
Major Urban Area: |
TUNIS (capital) 790,000 (2011)
|
Languages: |
Arabic (official, one of the languages of commerce), French (commerce), Berber (Tamazight)
|
Ethnic Groups: |
Arab 98%, European 1%, Jewish and other 1%
|
Religions: |
Muslim (official; Sunni) 99.1%, other (includes Christian, Jewish, Shia Muslim, and Baha'i) 1%
|
History: |
Rivalry between French and Italian interests in Tunisia culminated in a French invasion in 1881 and the creation of a protectorate. Agitation for independence in the decades following World War I was finally successful in getting the French to recognize Tunisia as an independent state in 1956. The country's first president, Habib BOURGUIBA, established a strict one-party state. He dominated the country for 31 years, repressing Islamic fundamentalism and establishing rights for women unmatched by any other Arab nation. In November 1987, BOURGUIBA was removed from office and replaced by Zine el Abidine BEN ALI in a bloodless coup. Street protests that began in Tunis in December 2010 over high unemployment, corruption, widespread poverty, and high food prices escalated in January 2011, culminating in rioting that led to hundreds of deaths. On 14 January 2011, the same day BEN ALI dismissed the government, he fled the country, and by late January 2011, a "national unity government" was formed. Elections for the new Constituent Assembly were held in late October 2011, and in December, it elected human rights activist Moncef MARZOUKI as interim president. The Assembly began drafting a new constitution in February 2012 and, after several iterations and a months-long political crisis that stalled the transition, ratified the document in January 2014. Presidential and parliamentary elections for a permanent government could be held by the end of 2014.
|
Coastline: |
1,148 km
|
Climate: |
temperate in north with mild, rainy winters and hot, dry summers; desert in south
|
Terrain: |
mountains in north; hot, dry central plain; semiarid south merges into the Sahara
|
Natural Resources: |
petroleum, phosphates, iron ore, lead, zinc, salt
|
Photos
Tunisia Embassy Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Map
Tunisia Embassy Addis Ababa, Ethiopia
Reviews
Reviews not available. Be the first to write a review.