Search Site

Trends banner

Oracle shares up 35%

Huge AI contracts lead to the surge.

ADCB to raise $1.66bn

The rights issue aimed at boosting growth.

EGA H1 revenue $4.11bn

Net profit before GAC $445 million.

Borouge to pay $660m H1 dividend

Its net profit for H1 was $474 million.

TAQA secures $2.31bn loan

It will be utilized in a phased manner.

French PM pledges to help Tunisia reform

    • Tunisia is struggling with a deep economic crisis compounded by the Covid-19 pandemic

    • French Prime Minister Jean Castex calls reforms in Tunisia important for relations between two countries

    French Prime Minister Jean Castex on Thursday pledged to help Tunisia forge ahead with reforms, as the North African country grapples with a deep economic crisis compounded by the Covid-19 pandemic.

    Castex said Paris was ready to help Tunisia, a former French colony he described as a “friend”, carry out economic and social reform that could improve conditions, with unemployment rates standing at 18 percent.

    “These reforms are important for Tunisia, for the Tunisian people and for the Franco-Tunisian partnership,” Castex said after talks with his Tunisian counterpart Hichem Mechichi.

    A decade since its 2011 revolution, Tunisia country faces political and economic crises.

    Tunisia is hoping to secure a three-year loan in exchange for implementing reform from the International Monetary Fund, which expects to see GDP growth of 3.8 percent this year, after an unprecedented 8.9 percent contraction in 2020.

    France last year pledged to lend Tunis 350 million euros, with 100 million euros handed over so far.

    France also sent three oxygen concentrators, 18 ventilators and more than 200,000 face masks to help Tunisia’s health authorities cope with a spike in Covid-19 cases.

    Tunisia, a country of almost 12 million, has officially recorded more than 348,000 coronavirus cases and 12,793 deaths.

    Last month Mechichi said the country was going through “the worst health crisis in its history” and that health facilities were at risk of collapse.

    France and Tunisia have strong trade and financial relations. In 2018, France was Tunisia’s leading trading partner, as the destination for almost 30 percent of Tunisian exports and the source of more than 14 percent of its imports.

    France is also the country’s leading source of foreign direct investment.