Telecommunications in Tunisia
Telecommunications in Tunisia includes telephones, radio, television, and the Internet. The Ministry of Communication Technologies, a cabinet-level governmental agency, is in charge of organizing the sector.
Telephones
- International calling code: 216
- International call prefix: 00
- Fixed lines: 1.2 million, 1.3 million, 1.2 million ; 654,000
- Mobile cellular: 12.4 million, 9.8 million, 7.2 million ; 1.9 million ; 50,000
- Teledensity: ~100 telephones per 100 persons
- System: Above the African average and continuing to be upgraded; key centers are Sfax, Sousse, Bizerte, and Tunis; telephone network is completely digitized
- *domestic: trunk facilities consist of open-wire lines, coaxial cable, and microwave radio relay
- *international: 5 submarine cables; 2 satellite earth stations - Intelsat and Arabsat; coaxial cable and microwave radio relay to Algeria and Libya; participant in Medarabtel; 2 international gateway digital switches
Radio and television
First radio service began in 1935 in Tunisia.- Radio stations: Several state-owned and private radio networks
- Radios: 2.06 million
- Television stations: State-owned and private national TV channels; Egyptian, French, and pan-Arab satellite TV command large audiences
- Televisions: 920,000
- Households with television: 91.7%
Prior to the Tunisian revolution there were four private radio stations operating in Tunisia. In June 2011, following the Tunisian revolution, a recommendation to license twelve new private radio stations was forwarded to the interim Prime Minister. In August 2011 none of the recommendations had been acted upon. However, several stations began broadcasting under time-limited provisional licenses. The stations operate without specific operating rules because a new regulatory framework is not yet in place. In part due to the lack of a regulatory framework the government's National Office of Broadcasting requires broadcasters to pay a licensing fee of 120,000 dinars, and while that license is not necessary to broadcast, it confers a certain amount of legitimacy that broadcasters need to draw advertisers. The large fee is difficult for new start-up stations and the new stations feel that the fees provide an unfair advantage for the older more established private groups organized under the previous regime.
Internet
- Top level domain (TLD): .tn
- Access: Available throughout the country using a fibre-optic backbone
- Internet Service Providers : 12
- International bandwidth: 62 Gbit/s in 2012, 50 Gbit/s in 2010, 1.3 Gbit/s in 2006
- Internet users: 4,196,564, 840,000 ; 410,000
- Internet penetration: 39.1%, 36.8%, 17.1%, 9.7%, 2.8%
- Fixed Internet subscriptions: 604,102 ; 543,290 ; 253,149 ; 150,220 ; 36,657
- Broadband Internet subscribers: 544,392 or 5.1%, 481,810 or 4.6%, 372,818 or 3.6%, 43,845 or 0.4%
- Facebook subscribers: 2,602,640
- Facebook penetration: 24.5%
- Public CyberCafés: 350