![]() Flag Description of Tunisia: red with a white disk in the center bearing a red crescent nearly encircling a red five-pointed star; the crescent and star are traditional symbols of Islam |
![]() Map of Tunisia |
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Geography
Location: North Africa, bordering the Mediterranean Sea, between Algeria and
Libya.
Area: 163,610 sq. km. (63,378 sq. mi.), slightly smaller than Missouri.
Cities: Capital--Tunis; Greater Tunis Area, Sfax, Nabeul, Sousse.
Terrain: Arable land in north and along central coast; south is mostly semiarid
or desert.
Climate: Hot, dry summers and mild, rainy winters.
Land Use: Arable land, 17.05%; permanent crops, 13.08%; other,
69.87%.
People
Nationality: Noun and adjective--Tunisian(s).
Population (2006): 10,216,000.
Annual growth rate (2005): 1.12%. Birth rate--17.1 births/1,000
population. Death rate--5.17 deaths/1,000 population.
Ethnic groups: Arab-Berber 98%, European 1%, other 1%.
Religions: Muslim 98%, Christian 1%, Jewish less than 1%.
Languages: Arabic (official), French.
Education: Years compulsory--9. Literacy (definition--age 15 and
over can read and write)--74% (2006 est.).
Health (2006): Infant mortality rate--20.3 deaths/1,000 live births.
Life expectancy--73.5 total, 71.6 years male, 75.5 years female.
Work force (2006): 3.503 million.
Unemployment rate (2006): 13.9%.
Government
Type: Republic.
Constitution: June 1, 1959; amended July 12, 1988, June 29, 1999, and June 1,
2002.
Independence: March 20, 1956.
Branches: Executive--chief of state President Zine El Abidine BEN ALI
(since November 7, 1987) head of government, Prime Minister Mohamed GHANNOUCHI
(since November 17, 1999) cabinet, Council of Ministers appointed by the
president; president elected by popular vote for a 5-year term; election last
held October 24, 2004 (next to be held in October 2009); prime minister
appointed by the president. Election results: President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali
reelected for a fourth term; candidates from opposition: Mohamed Bouchiha (PUP),
Mohamed Ali Halouani (Et-Tajdid) and Mounir Beji (PSL); percent of vote--Zine El
Abidine Ben Ali 94.49% (officially).
Legislative--bicameral. Chamber of Deputies or Majlis al-Nuwaab (189
seats; 5-year terms; 152 seats are elected by popular vote for party lists on a
winner-take-all basis). An additional 37 seats (20% of the total) are
distributed to opposition parties on a proportional basis as provided for in
1999 constitutional amendments. Elections last held October 24, 2004 (next to be
held in October 2009). Election results: percent of vote by party--RCD 92%;
seats by party--RCD 152, MDS 14, PUP 11, UDU 7, Et-Tajdid 3, PSL 2. Note: The
opposition increased number of seats from 34 to 37. A referendum in 2002 created
a second chamber, the Chamber of Advisors. Elections for the Chamber of Advisors
were held in July 2005.
Judicial--Nominally independent District Courts, Courts of Appeal,
Highest Court (Cour de Cassation). Judges of the Highest Court are appointed by
the President.
Political parties: Democratic Constitutional Rally (Rassemblement
Constitutionnel Democratique--ruling party) or RCD, President Zine El Abidine
Ben Ali; Et-Tajdid Movement (Mohamed Harmel); Democratic Forum for Labor and
Liberties or FDTL (Mustapha Ben Jaafar); Liberal Social Party or PSL (Mondher
Thabet); Movement of Democratic Socialists or MDS (Ismail Boulahia); Popular
Unity Party or PUP (Mohamed Bouchiha); Unionist Democratic Union or UDU (Ahmed
Inoubli); Progressive Democratic Party or PDP (Maya Jribi); Green Party for
Progress or PVP (Mongi Khamassi).
Political pressure groups and leaders: Authorized--Tunisian Human Rights
League or LTDH (Mokhtar Trifi); Tunisian Association of Democratic Women or ATFD
(Khadija Cherif); Tunisian Bar Association (Adbessatar Ben Moussa); Tunisian
Journalists' Association or AJT (Fouzi Bouzayane). Unauthorized --An-Nahdha
(Renaissance) the Islamic fundamentalist party (Rached El Ghanouchi, in exile);
National Council for Liberties in Tunisia or CNLT (Sihem Ben Sedrine); Movement
of 18 October (Nejib Chebbi, Hamma Hammami, et. al) Congress for the Republic or
CPR (Moncef Marzouki); Tunisian Communist Labor Party or POCT (Hamma Hammami);
Tunisian Green Party or PVT (Abdelkader Zitouni); International Association for
the Support of Political Prisoners or AISPP (Co-ordinator: Mokhtar Yahyaoui);
Tunisian Journalists' Syndicate or SJT (Lotfi Hajji).
Administrative divisions: 24 governorates--Ariana, Beja, Ben Arous, Bizerte, El
Kef, Gabes, Gafsa, Jendouba, Kairouan, Kasserine, Kebili, Mahdia, Manouba,
Medenine, Monastir, Nabeul, Sfax, Sidi Bou Zid, Siliana, Sousse, Tataouine,
Tozeur, Tunis, Zaghouan.
Suffrage: Universal at 20. (Active duty members of the military cannot vote.)
Economy
Real GDP (2006, 2000$ mil): $25,498.
Real GDP growth rate (2006): 5.2%.
Per capita GDP, PPP (2006): $8,898.
Natural resources: natural gas, crude oil, phosphates, salt, iron ore.
Agriculture: Products--olives, dates, citrus, almonds, grains.
Industry: Types--petroleum, mining (particularly phosphate), textiles,
footwear, food processing.
Services: Tourism, commerce, transport, communications.
Sector information as %GDP (2006 est.): Agriculture, 12%; industry,
33%; services, 55%.
Trade (2005): Exports--$11.7 billion: hydrocarbons, agricultural
products, phosphates, chemicals, textiles, mechanical, electric components.
By region--Africa 9.9%, Americas 3.1%, Asia 3.7%, Europe 83.3%. By
country (U.S.$ million)--France, $3807.07, Italy, $2598.46, Germany, $926.0,
Spain, $739.0; Libya, $635.15; Belgium, $282.61; UK, $322.0; U.S. $145.6.
Imports ($15.2 billion)--industrial goods and equipment, hydrocarbons, food,
consumer goods. By region--Africa 7.8%, Americas 5.9% Asia 10.5%, Europe
75.8%. By country (U.S.$ million)--France $3461.61, Italy $2836.15,
Germany $1200.61, Spain $714.69, Libya $743.0, China $501.84, U.S. $435.15.
PEOPLE AND HISTORY
Modern Tunisians are the descendents of indigenous Berbers and of people from
numerous civilizations that have invaded, migrated to, and been assimilated into
the population over the millennia. Recorded history in Tunisia begins with the
arrival of Phoenicians, who founded Carthage and other North African settlements
in the 8th century B.C. Carthage became a major sea power, clashing with Rome
for control of the Mediterranean until it was defeated and captured by the
Romans in 146 B.C. The Romans ruled and settled in North Africa until the 5th
century, when the Roman Empire fell and Tunisia was invaded by European tribes,
including the Vandals. The Muslim conquest in the 7th century transformed
Tunisia and the make-up of its population, with subsequent waves of migration
from around the Arab and Ottoman world, including significant numbers of Spanish
Muslims and Jews at the end of the 15th century. Tunisia became a center of Arab
culture and learning and was assimilated into the Turkish Ottoman Empire in the
16th century. It was a French protectorate from 1881 until independence in 1956,
and retains close political, economic, and cultural ties with France.
Nearly all Tunisians (98% of the population) are Muslim. There has been a
Jewish population on the southern island of Djerba for 2000 years, and there
remains a small Jewish population in Tunis and other cities, which is mainly
descended from those who fled Spain in the late 15th century. A small Christian
community is dispersed throughout the country, and includes foreign residents,
as well as a few hundred native-born citizens who have converted to
Christianity. Small nomadic indigenous minorities have been mostly assimilated
into the larger population.
GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL CONDITIONS
Tunisia is a republic with a strong presidential system dominated by a single
political party. President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali has been in office since
1987, when he deposed Habib Bourguiba, president since Tunisia's independence
from France in 1956. The ruling party, the Democratic Constitutional Rally (RCD),
was the sole legal party for 25 years--including when it was known as the
Socialist Destourian Party (PSD)--and still dominates political life. The
president is elected to 5-year terms--with virtually no opposition--and appoints
a prime minister and cabinet, who play a strong role in the execution of policy.
Regional governors and local administrators are also appointed by the central
government; largely consultative mayors and municipal councils are elected.
There is a bicameral legislative body. The Chamber of Deputies has 189 seats,
20% of which are reserved for the opposition. It plays a limited role as an
arena for debate on national policy but never originates legislation and
virtually always passes bills presented by the executive with only minor
changes. A referendum in 2002 created a second chamber, the Chamber of Advisors.
First-time elections for the Chamber of Advisors were held in July 2005. The
judiciary is nominally independent, but responds to executive direction,
especially in politically sensitive cases. The military is professional and does
not play a role in politics.
Tunisia's independence from France in 1956 ended a protectorate established
in 1881. President Bourguiba, who had been the leader of the independence
movement, declared Tunisia a republic in 1957, ending the nominal rule of the
Ottoman Beys. In June 1959, Tunisia adopted a constitution modeled on the French
system, which established the basic outline of the highly centralized
presidential system that continues today. The military was given a defined
defensive role, which excluded participation in politics. Starting from
independence, President Bourguiba placed strong emphasis on economic and social
development, especially education, the status of women, and the creation of
jobs, policies that continued under the Ben Ali administration. The result was
strong social progress--high literacy and school attendance rates, low
population growth rates, and relatively low poverty rates--and generally steady
economic growth. These pragmatic policies have contributed to social and
political stability.
Progress toward full democracy has been slow. Over the years, President
Bourguiba stood unopposed for re-election several times and was named "President
for Life" in 1974 by a constitutional amendment. At the time of independence,
the Neo-Destourian Party (later the PSD)--enjoying broad support because of its
role at the forefront of the independence movement--became the sole legal party.
Opposition parties were banned until 1981.
When President Ben Ali came to power in 1987, he promised greater democratic
openness and respect for human rights, signing a "national pact" with opposition
parties. He oversaw constitutional and legal changes, including abolishing the
concept of President for life, the establishment of presidential term limits,
and provision for greater opposition party participation in political life. But
the ruling party, renamed the Democratic Constitutional Rally (RCD), continued
to dominate the political scene because of its historic popularity and the
advantage it enjoyed as the ruling party. Ben Ali ran for re-election unopposed
in 1989 and 1994. In the multiparty era, he won 99.44% of the vote in 1999 and
94.49% of the vote in 2004. In both elections he faced weak opponents. The RCD
won all seats in the Chamber of Deputies in 1989, and won all of the directly
elected seats in the 1994, 1999, and 2004 elections. However, constitutional
amendments provided for the distribution of additional seats to the opposition
parties by 1999 and 2004. Currently, five opposition parties share 37 of the 189
seats in the Chamber of Deputies. A May 2002 referendum approved constitutional
changes proposed by Ben Ali that allowed him to run for a fourth term in 2004
(and a fifth, his final, because of age limits on presidential candidates, in
2009), and provided judicial immunity during and after his presidency. The
referendum also created a second parliamentary chamber, the Chamber of Advisors,
and provided for other changes.
There are currently eight legal opposition parties, the Social Democratic
Movement (MDS), the Popular Unity Party (PUP), the Union of Democratic Unionists
(UDU), Et-Tajdid (also called the Renewal Movement), the Liberal Social Party (PSL),
and the Green Party for Progress (PVP), plus the Democratic Progressive Party (PDP)
and the Democratic Forum for Labor and Liberties (FDTL), the only two not
represented in the Chamber of Deputies. The parties are generally weak and
divided and face considerable restrictions on their ability to organize. The
Islamist opposition party, An-Nahdha, was allowed to operate openly in the late
1980s and early 1990s despite a ban on religiously based parties. The government
outlawed An-Nahdha as a terrorist organization in 1991 and arrested its leaders
and thousands of party members and sympathizers, accusing them of plotting to
overthrow the president. The party is no longer openly active in Tunisia, and
its leaders operate from exile in London. Several pro-democracy activists have
been denied permission to establish other opposition political parties.
While there are thousands of official, established non-governmental
organizations, civil society remains weak. The Tunisian Human Rights League (LTDH),
the first human rights organization in Africa and the Arab world, operates under
restrictions and suffers from internal divisions. The Tunisian Association of
Democratic Women (ATFD), the Young Lawyers Association, and the Bar Association
also are active. The government has denied legal status to a handful of other
human rights advocacy groups who, nonetheless, attempt to organize and publicize
information on the human rights situation in the country.
Despite the Government of Tunisia's stated committed to making progress
toward a democratic system, citizens do not enjoy political freedom. The
government imposes restrictions on freedom of association and speech and does
not allow a free press. Many critics have called for clearer, effective
distinctions between executive, legislative, and judicial powers. Foreign media,
including foreign-based satellite television channels, have criticized the
Tunisian Government for the lack of press freedom. Tunisia ranked number 148 out
of 167 countries in the 2006 Reporters Without Borders list of World Press
Freedom rankings. As reflected in the State Department's annual human rights
report, there are frequent reports of widespread torture and abuse of prisoners,
especially political prisoners.
Trade unions have played a key role in Tunisia's history since the struggle
for independence, when the 1952 assassination of labor leader Farhat Hached was
a catalyst for the final push against French domination. The General Union of
Tunisian Workers (UGTT), the country's sole labor confederation, has generally
focused on bread-and-butter issues, but at some critical moments in Tunisia's
history has played a decisive role in the nation's political life. Despite a
drop in union membership from 400,000 to about 250,000 as the structure of the
Tunisian economy changed, the UGTT continues to hold a prominent place in
Tunisia's political and social life, and negotiates with government and the
umbrella employer group for higher wages and better benefits. The current
leadership under Abdessalem Jerad was elected at the 21st UGTT
Congress held in December 2006.
Tunisia is a leader in the Arab world in promoting the legal and social
status of women. A Personal Status Code was adopted shortly after independence
in 1956, which, among other things, gave women full legal status (allowing them
to run and own businesses, have bank accounts, and seek passports under their
own authority). It also, for the first time in the Arab world, outlawed
polygamy. The government required parents to send girls to school, and today
more than 50% of university students are women. Rights of women and children
were further enhanced by 1993 reforms, which included a provision to allow
Tunisian women to transmit citizenship even if they are married to a foreigner
and living abroad. The government has supported a remarkably successful family
planning program that has reduced the population growth rate to just over 1% per
annum, contributing to Tunisia's economic and social stability.
Tunisia's judiciary is headed by the Court of Cassation, whose judges are
appointed by the president. The country is divided administratively into 24
governorates. The president appoints all governors.
Principal Government Officials
President--Zine El Abidine Ben Ali
Prime Minister--Mohamed Ghannouchi
Minister of State--Abdelaziz Ben Dhia
Minister of Foreign Affairs--Abdelwahab Abdallah
Minister of National Defense--Kamel Morjane
Ambassador to the United States--Mohamed Nejib Hachana
Tunisia's embassy in the United States is located at 1515 Massachusetts
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20005 (tel. 1-202-862-1850, fax 1-202-862-1858).
ECONOMY
Tunisia's economy has emerged from rigid state control and is now mostly
liberalized. World Bank and IMF support, coupled with prudent economic policies
implemented by the Tunisian Government in the mid-eighties after a balance of
payments crisis, has resulted in regular stable growth. Although this faltered
after 9/11, the economy has since bounced back, thanks to healthy exports,
renewed growth in tourism, and favorable climatic conditions which boosted
agricultural production.
Manufacturing industries, producing largely for export, are a major source of
foreign currency revenue. Industrial production represents about 28 percent of
GDP and primarily consists of petroleum, mining (particularly phosphates),
textiles, footwear, food processing, and electrical and mechanical manufactures.
Textiles are a major source of foreign currency revenue, with more than 90% of
production being exported. While the end of the Multifiber Arrangement in 2005
eroded Tunisia's competitiveness in its traditional European textile markets, to
counteract this, manufacturers are successfully upgrading product lines and
exporting smaller quantities of higher value items.
Tourism is a major source of foreign exchange, representing about 20 percent
of hard currency receipts, as well as an important sector for employment. 6.5
million tourists visited Tunisia in 2006, hailing largely from Europe and North
Africa. While the influx of tourists represents a boon to the economy. Tunisia's
large expatriate population (about 1 million) also makes a positive and
significant contribution. Over the past five years, remittances from abroad
averaged 1.61 million dinars (approximately 1.21 million USD) a year, or roughly
5 percent of Tunisia's GDP and one fourth of the country's foreign currency
earnings.
Soaring oil prices have hit the Tunisian economy hard. The country is a net
importer of hydrocarbon products. Domestic crude production is approximately
112,000 barrels per day, but refining capacity is only about 30,000 barrels a
day. Proven reserves are in the region of 300 million barrels. Tunisia has one
oil refinery in Bizerte on the north coast and in May 2006 awarded a tender for
a second at La Skhira near Gabes to Qatar Petroleum. Natural gas production is
currently about 3 million tons oil equivalent Proven reserves are about 2.8
trillion cubic feet, two-thirds of which are located offshore. British Gas is
the major developer of the natural gas industry, and the largest foreign
investor in Tunisia.
Economically and commercially, Tunisia is very closely linked to Europe.
Tunisia signed an Association Agreement with the EU, due to go into effect in
2008, which will eliminate customs tariffs and other trade barriers on a wide
range of goods and services. In advance of the 2008 implementation of this
Association Agreement, the Government of Tunisia embarked on a program, "Mise à
Niveau",(industrial upgrading) to improve the competitiveness of Tunisian
industry. Launched on a pilot scale in 1996, the "Mise a Niveau" program is
supported in part by EU grants. The program consists of technical assistance,
training, subsidies, and infrastructure upgrades aimed at encouraging and
assisting Tunisian private sector industrial restructuring.
EU member states also provide the bulk of FDI, much of which has come in
under the Government of Tunisia privatization program launched in 1987. In May
2006 the Government of Tunisia announced that overall its privatization program
had raised $1.9 billion, of which $1.4 billion was foreign capital. This does
not include the $2.25 billion the Government of Tunisia recently received for
the sale to Dubai Holding of a 35% share in the national telecommunications
authority, Tunisie Telecom. Persian Gulf investments in telecommunications, real
estate, and energy are also a major source of FDI.
The Ministry of Industry and Energy is responsible for a program to improve
the international competitiveness of Tunisian industry in preparation for free
trade with the European Union. Launched on a pilot scale in 1996, the "Mise a
Niveau" (industrial upgrading) program is supported in part by EU grants
incorporated into the EU Association Agreement. The program combines government
technical assistance, training, subsidies, and infrastructure upgrades aimed at
encouraging and assisting Tunisian private sector industrial restructuring. More
than 2,300 companies have applied to join the program, with more than half
accepted.
A Trade and Investment Framework Agreement (TIFA) with the U.S. was signed in
October 2002 and follow-up TIFA Councils were held in October 2003 and June
2005, but little progress has been made towards generating the necessary reforms
required to engender a free trade agreement between the U.S. and Tunisia. The
framework for a multilateral trade agreement with Egypt, Jordan, and Morocco,
known as the Agadir Agreement, has also been signed. The Agadir Agreement
creates a potential market of over 100 million people across North Africa and
into the Middle East.
The government still retains control over certain "strategic" sectors of the
economy (finance, hydrocarbons, aviation, electricity and gas distribution, and
water resources) but the private sector is playing an increasingly important
role. Tunisia is a founding member of the World Trade Organization (WTO) and is
publicly committed to a free trade regime and export-led growth. Most goods can
be imported without prior licensing, although non-tariff administrative barriers
sometimes delay imports of goods. Significant import duties, coupled with high
consumption taxes on certain items and a value-added tax (VAT), add considerably
to the local price of imported goods.
The Government of Tunisia is beginning to take a more proactive stance on
intellectual property rights (IPR) enforcement and education. Tunisia's recent
intellectual property rights law is designed to meet WTO TRIPS (Trade-Related
Aspects of Intellectual Property) minimum standards and there is on-going
collaboration between the United States and Tunisian governments to promote
public awareness of these rights.
Tunisia's timely completion of its IMF program (1987-1994) and subsequent
fiscal conservatism have earned it investment grade ratings from a number of
international institutions, although Standard and Poor has noted that ratings on
Tunisia are constrained by its highly centralized political system and the need
for further structural reforms. In mid-2005 the Tunisian Central Bank issued a
new Euro-denominated bond on the London financial market. The issue totaled over
$450 million (400 million Euros) with a maturity of 15 years. In 2004 the
Government of Tunisia sold a similar bond with a total value of nearly $550
million and seven-year maturity.
The Central Bank is moving from direct management of the financial sector
towards a more traditional supervisory and regulatory role. Commercial banks are
permitted to participate in the forward foreign exchange market. The dinar is
convertible for current account transactions but some convertible dinar/foreign
exchange account transactions still require Central Bank authorization. Total
convertibility of the Tunisian dinar is probably still some years away. The
dinar is traded on an intra-bank market. Trading operates around a managed float
established by the Central Bank (based upon a basket of the Euro, the U.S.
Dollar and the Japanese Yen). The stock exchange remains under the supervision
of the state-run financial market council, and lists about 50 companies. A new
phase of the Mise a Niveau program aims to double this figure.
Tunisia has a relatively well-developed infrastructure that includes six
commercial seaports and six international airports. The prequalification phase
for a seventh airport near the coast at Enfidha was announced in April 2004. The
project, a Build-to-Own 40-year concession eventually able to handle 30 million
passengers per year, was awarded in May 2007 to a Turkish group and construction
is expected to begin in July 2007. A tender for a deep water port in the same
region is expected also.
Average annual income per capita in Tunisia is approaching $3000. The minimum
monthly legal wage for a 48-hour week was recently raised to approximately $180.
Tunisia's goal of pushing per capita incomes into the middle emerging market
level calls for an average 6-7% growth rate instead of 4-5%. In 2006, GDP growth
was 5.2%, but inflation spiked to 4.5%, from 2% the year before. Official
figures claim unemployment is around 14%, but it is generally believed to be
much higher in some regions. Despite the present low rate of population growth,
a demographic peak is now hitting higher education and the job market. Tunisia
has invested heavily in education and the number of students enrolled at
university has soared from 41,000 in 1986 to over 360,000. Providing jobs for
these highly educated people represents a major challenge for the Government of
Tunisia.
FOREIGN RELATIONS
President Ben Ali has maintained Tunisia's long-time policy of seeking good
relations with the West, including the United States, while playing an active
role in Arab and African regional bodies. President Bourguiba took a nonaligned
stance but emphasized close relations with Europe and the United States.
Tunisia has long been a voice for moderation and realism in the Middle East.
President Bourguiba was the first Arab leader to call for the recognition of
Israel, in a speech in Jericho in 1965. Tunisia served as the headquarters of
the Arab League from 1979 to 1990 and hosted the Palestine Liberation
Organization's (PLO) headquarters from 1982 to 1993. (The PLO Political
Department remains in Tunis.) Tunisia consistently has played a moderating role
in the negotiations for a comprehensive Middle East peace. In 1993, Tunisia was
the first Arab country to host an official Israeli delegation as part of the
Middle East peace process. The Government of Tunisia operated an Interests
Section in Israel from April 1996 until the outbreak of the second Intifada in
2000. Israeli citizens may travel to Tunisia on their Israeli passports.
Wedged between Algeria and Libya, Tunisia has sought to maintain good
relations with its neighbors despite occasionally strained relations. Tunisia
and Algeria resolved a longstanding border dispute in 1993 and have cooperated
in the construction of a natural gas pipeline through Tunisia that connects
Algeria to Italy. In 2002, Tunisia signed an agreement with Algeria to demarcate
the maritime frontier between the two countries.
Tunisia's relations with Libya have been erratic since Tunisia annulled a
brief agreement to form a union in 1974. Diplomatic relations were broken in
1976, restored in 1977, and deteriorated again in 1980, when Libyan-trained
rebels attempted to seize the town of Gafsa. In 1982, the International Court of
Justice ruled in Libya's favor in the partition of the oil-rich continental
shelf it shares with Tunisia. Libya's 1985 expulsion of Tunisian workers and
military threats led Tunisia to sever relations. Relations were normalized again
in 1987. While supporting the UN sanctions imposed following airline bombings,
Tunisia has been careful to maintain positive relations with her neighbor.
Tunisia supported the lifting of UN sanctions against Libya in 2003, and Libya
is again becoming a major trading partner, with 2005 exports to Libya valued at
$472.2 million and imports at $509.9 million.
Tunisia has supported the development of the Arab Maghreb Union (UMA), which
includes Algeria, Morocco, Mauritania, and Libya. Progress on Maghreb
integration remains stymied, however, as a result of bilateral tensions between
some member countries. Tunisia has played a positive role in trying to resolve
these tensions.
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