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Caid Essebsi Cabinet
Cabinet members Cabinet as of 1 July 2011 References {{Africa topic, Cabinet of , title=National cabinets of Africa Essid In IEEE 802.11 wireless local area networking standards (including Wi-Fi), a service set is a group of wireless network devices which share a ''service set identifier'' (''SSID'')—typically the natural language label that users see as a network ... Cabinets established in 2011 Cabinets disestablished in 2011 2011 in Tunisian politics 2011 establishments in Tunisia ...
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Beji Caid Essebsi
Beji Caid Essebsi (or es-Sebsi; ar, الباجي قائد السبسي, translit=Muhammad al-Bājī Qā’id as-Sibsī, ; 29 November 1926 – 25 July 2019) was a Tunisian politician who served as the 6th president of Tunisia from 31 December 2014 until his death on 25 July 2019. Previously, he served as the minister of foreign affairs from 1981 to 1986 and as the prime minister from February 2011 to December 2011. Essebsi's political career spanned six decades, culminating in his leadership of Tunisia in its transition to democracy.Carlotta Gall & Lilia BlaiseBéji Caïd Essebsi, President Who Guided Tunisia to Democracy, Dies at 92 ''The New York Times'' (25 July 2019). Essebsi was the founder of the Nidaa Tounes political party, which won a plurality in the 2014 parliamentary election. In December 2014, he won the first regular presidential election following the Tunisian Revolution, becoming Tunisia's first democratically elected president. Early life Born in 1926, in S ...
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Laroussi Mizouri
Laroussi Mizouri (born May 6, 1950) is a Tunisian politician. He was appointed minister of religious affairs in the government of Mohamed Ghannouchi. See also * Ghannouchi II Cabinet During the Tunisian Revolution President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali fled Tunisia on 14 January 2011 Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi then briefly took over as Acting President. On the morning of 15 January 2011 Ghannouchi had handed over the presi ... References Living people People of the Tunisian revolution 1950 births Place of birth missing (living people) {{Tunisia-politician-stub ...
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Mohamed Aloulou
Mohamed Aloulou () is a Tunisian cardiologist and politician. He was Minister of Youth and Sports from 17 January - 1 July 2011 in the second cabinet of Mohamed Ghannouchi and continued in the same role in the following Essebsi Cabinet. Biography Family and education Born 19 November 1941 in Sfax, Aloulou studied at the University of Strasbourg, in the Faculty of Medicine. After graduating with a degree in cardiology, Aloulou settled in Sfax. From 2004 to 2010, he was vice-president of thConseil national de l'Ordre des médecins Sporting career In 1989 and 1990, he was president of the football club CS Sfaxien. Political career He was Vice President of Sports in the city of Sfax from 1975 to 1980 and of Culture from 1985 to 1990. Between 1996 and 2010, he was vice president of the Association de protection de la nature et de l'environnement of Sfax. During the 2011 Tunisian protests, he was named Minister of Youth and Sports in the Second cabinet of Mohamed Ghannouch ...
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Yassine Brahim
Yassine Brahim ( ar, ياسين إبراهيم; born 20 February 1966 in Mahdia, Tunisia) is a Tunisian engineer, manager and politician. Leader of the secular liberal Afek Tounes party, he was appointed Minister of Development, Investment and International Cooperation in February 2015. Early life and education Born 1966 in Mahdia, Brahim was raised in Bizerte by Tunisian Air Force officer Mahfoudh Brahim and his mother, a teacher and daughter of revolutionary Abdelaziz Mastouri. When he was ten years old, they moved to Carthage where Brahim visited secondary school. With a stipend of the Tunisian government, he left Tunisia in 1983 for a preparatory course in Toulouse, France. In 1989 he received his diploma in Engineering at École Centrale Paris. Professional career Brahim subsequently worked for Cap Gemini. A job with French bank Société Générale led him back to Tunisia, where in 2000 he founded his own information services company ''2ic'' which in 2004 he so ...
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Ministry Of Transport (Tunisia)
The Ministry of Transport (french: Ministère du Transport de la Tunisie, ar, وزارة اﻟﻨﻘﻞ) is a government ministry of Tunisia. The ministry offices are located in Tunis, along ''Avenue Mohamed Bouazizi'', near Tunis Carthage Airport. As of 2020 Moez Chakchouk is the minister. The ''Direction Générale de l’Aviation Civile'' (DGAC) serves as Tunisia's civil aviation authority and as the accident investigation agency of civil aircraft accidents. Agencies * Tunisian Civil Aviation and Airports Authority References External links Ministry of Transport Ministry of Transport Tunisia Transport Organizations investigating aviation accidents and incidents Tunisia ) , image_map = Tunisia location (orthographic projection).svg , map_caption = Location of Tunisia in northern Africa , image_map2 = , capital = Tunis , largest_city = capital , ... Transport organisations based in Tunisia ...
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Lilia Labidi
Lilia Labidi (Arabic: ليليا العبيدي) (born 1949) is a Tunisian anthropologist, feminist and politician. She was Minister of Women's Affairs, from January 17 to December 24, 2011, in the government of Mohamed Ghannouchi, and of Béji Caïd Essebsi. Life Lilia Labidi studied at the Paris Diderot University and obtained a doctorate in psychology in 1978 and a doctorate of state in anthropology in 1986. She was a lecturer in Clinical Psychology at the Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Tunis, Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, New Jersey, and George Washington University's Woodrow Wilson International Center. A committed feminist, she writes several books on the subject. She is a member of the Tunisian Women's Association for Development Research; she is a member of its steering committee in 1989. Following the 2011 revolution, Labidi was appointed Minister of Women's Affairs in the national unity government of Mohamed Ghannouchi and then in that ...
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Habiba Zéhi Ben Romdhane
Habiba Zehi Ben Romdhane was Tunisia's health minister. She took office in the interim Tunisian government which began on January 28, 2011, after protests had dislodged a longstanding authoritarian government. Habiba Zehi Ben Romdhane earned a public health degree from the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Tunis (1978) and trained further in public health at Laval University (1979), the University of Chicago (1981) and the University of Tokyo (1988). She is a professor of preventive medicine with the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Tunis and head of the Laboratory for Research on the epidemiology and prevention of cardiovascular diseases and has worked with the World Health Organization. In 2001, she received the Award of Maghreb societies of Medical Sciences. She is a founding member of the Tunisian League of Epidemiology, and other national and international medical societies. (fr) Habiba Zehi Ben Romdhane cofounded the Tunisian Association of Democratic ...
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Ettajdid Movement
The Ettajdid Movement (''Movement for Renewal'' ; ar, حركة التجديد, ' ; french: Mouvement Ettajdid), also referred to simply as Ettajdid, was a centre-left secularist political party in Tunisia, active from 1993 to 2012. History and profile Ettajdid evolved out of the old Tunisian Communist Party when it abandoned its former ideology in 1993. During the Ben Ali rule it was one of the legal, although oppressed opposition parties. After the Tunisian revolution of 2011, it became part of the Democratic Modernist Pole alliance and in 2012 it merged into the Social Democratic Path. It was led by its First Secretary Mohamed Harmel from its creation until 2007 and then by Ahmed Brahim until its dissolution. Adopting its new name and abandoning communism in April 1993, the party adopted a social economic programme, and it was legalised in November 1993. In the 1994 election, the party won four seats. This increased to five in 1999, before falling to three in the 2004 ele ...
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Ahmed Brahim (politician)
Ahmed Brahim ( ar, أحمد إبراهيم, ''ʾAḥmad Ibrāhīm''; 14 June 1946 – 14 April 2016) was a Tunisian politician. He was the First Secretary of Ettajdid Movement and the leader of the Democratic Modernist Pole until April 2012, when his party merged into the Social Democratic Path of which he became the president. He was the Ettajdid Movement's candidate for President of Tunisia in the 2009 presidential election. A linguist by profession, he was a professor of French at Tunis University; his area of study was comparative linguistics. Tunisian Revolution After the fall of Zine el-Abidine Ben Ali A zine ( ; short for ''magazine'' or ''fanzine'') is a small-circulation self-published work of original or appropriated texts and images, usually reproduced via a copy machine. Zines are the product of either a single person or of a very smal ..., he was appointed by the new government as the Minister of Higher Education and left the post on 7 March. Political positi ...
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Ministry Of Higher Education And Scientific Research (Tunisia)
The Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research (MHESR, french: Ministère de l'Enseignement supérieur) is a ministry of the Tunisia ) , image_map = Tunisia location (orthographic projection).svg , map_caption = Location of Tunisia in northern Africa , image_map2 = , capital = Tunis , largest_city = capital , ...n government. Its head office is in Tunis.Home page
Ministry of Higher Education and Scientific Research. Retrieved on 10 March 2013. "Avenue Ouled Haffouz - 1030 - Tunis - Tél : 71 786 300 - Fax : 71 801 701"


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Progressive Democratic Party (Tunisia)
The Progressive Democratic Party ( ar, الحزب الديمقراطي التقدمي, '; french: Parti démocrate progressiste), also referred to by its acronym PDP, was a secular liberal political party in Tunisia. History and profile The Progressive Democratic Party was founded under the name of ''Progressive Socialist Rally'' in 1983, gained legal recognition on 12 September 1988 and was renamed Progressive Democratic Party in 2001. Under the rule of Ben Ali it was a legal opposition party, but subjected to political repression. After the Tunisian revolution it was one of the major left-leaning secular political forces. It was led by Ahmed Najib Chebbi and Maya Jribi. On 9 April 2012, it merged into the Republican Party. The Progressive Democratic Party had a newspaper, ''Al-Mawqif''. Under the Ben Ali rule In its beginnings, the Progressive Socialist Rally (now PDP) gathered a broad range of currents from Marxists and pro-democracy activists to progressive Muslims. Dur ...
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Ahmed Najib Chebbi
Ahmed Najib Chebbi ( ar, أحمد نجيب الشابي, french: Ahmed Néjib Chebbi) or simply Najib Chebbi (born 30 July 1944) is a Tunisian attorney and politician. Chebbi is a prominent figure of the Tunisian opposition movement; in 1983, he founded the Democratic Progressive Party, which gained legal recognition in 1988. He is currently the leader of the Democratic Progressive Party. In 2006, Maya Jribi became the party's secretary-general, the first woman to hold such office in Tunisia. In 2009 Chebbi attempted to run as a candidate for President of Tunisia but was barred from running. In response to former authoritarian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali's statement during the 2010–2011 Tunisian protests promising 300,000 new jobs would be created and criticizing the protests, Chebbi said that despite official claims of police firing in self-defense that "the demonstrations were non-violent and the youths were claiming their rights to jobs" and that "the funeral processi ...
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