Tunisian Community Network (TCN)
Tunis Financial Harbour
North Africa's first offshore financial center will be built in Tunis at a total value of about US$3billion. Tunis Financial Harbor (TFH) will create over 15000 jobs, mostly skilled positions. The project is financed by the Gulf Finance House, one of the most successful and innovative Islamic investment banks in the Middle East.
Welcome to TCN
Dear friend:
You are invited to support the idea of creating a global social network for Tunisians (Tunisian Community Network or TCN) to act as a social networking resource that connects Tunisian communities worldwide and builds tight relationships with counterparts in Tunisia. The proposed network will be lightly-managed to encourage a balanced, open, fun, and respectful culture that brings out the best in people and steers clear of extremism and political rhetoric irrespective of slant. You can support this idea by simply joining and starting to use the various networking features of this site. You also can shape this project by taking your participation to the next level: propose ideas and test your leadership mettle by building momentum to see them through.
TCN proposes to act as a networking hub for many regional expatriate communities (Europe, North America, Gulf States, Australia, etc) and interface these communities with the homeland. So, where ever you are, whether you in Tunisia or abroad, please join, invite your Facebook or other network buddies, and let’s get to know each other!
UK Available Resources
Nazeh Ben Ammar élu vice Président du MENA Council
Lors de la réunion du Conseil des Chambres Mixtes Américaines de la région MENA (Moyen Orient et l’Afrique de Nord) à Amman le 27 Juillet, 2009, M. Nazeh Ben Ammar, Président de la Chambre de Commerce Tuniso-Américaine (TACC), a été élu Vice Président du dit Conseil pour les deux prochaines années.
Dans ce cadre, M. Ben Ammar a plaidé pour une meilleure synergie entre les chambres mixtes en vue de promouvoir la région en tant qu’un « seul marché ». En outre, M. Ben Ammar a appelé à utiliser les accords commerciaux signés entre les membres du Conseil pour le bénéfice de tous les pays de la région.
Il est à signaler que TACC est membre Fondateur du Conseil des AmChams, crée le 8 juillet 2005 et dont le but est de faciliter et d’augmenter la coopération entre les Chambres Mixtes Américaines dans la région du Moyen Orient et l’Afrique de Nord.
Le Comité MENA Council, qui relève du Bureau de la TACC, a vivement recommandé et soutenu la candidature de la TACC à la Vice Présidence du Conseil afin de renforcer la collaboration entre ces chambres et de promouvoir les opportunités d’affaires entre la région et les Etats Unis d’ Amérique. Les membres du Comité MENA de la TACC sont : Mme. Amel Bouchamaoui Hammami, M. Hatem Hachicha, Maître Sami Kallel et M. Naceur Hidoussi.
Rappelons que la TACC est une chambre mixte tuniso-américaine créée en 1989 – nous célébrons cette année nos 20 ans d’existence et une collaboration soutenue avec le secteur privé tunisien.
UN Mission Chief in Haiti: A Humble, Tenacious Man
(Huffington Post, January 17, 2010) UNITED NATIONS - Amid Haiti's unimaginable suffering, the death of Hédi Annabi, a highly-educated humble man, inflicted a raw pain to generations of UN staff and journalists who remember his kindness, his droll humor, his mastery of detail and his tenacity.
Despite his high-level jobs -- an assistant secretary-general for peacekeeping in New York -- Annabi, a Tunisian, who turned 65 last September, kept a low profile outside of UN headquarters where he was the first at work in the morning and the last to leave. In September 2007 he was appointed head of the UN mission in Haiti.
"During the years we worked together, I probably saw him more than my wife. Hédi WAS peacekeeping," said Jean-Marie Guéhenno, his boss from 2000 to 2007.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon (in Haiti on Sunday), confirmed Annabi had died in the earthquake on January 12 that devastated the Caribbean nation. He also announced the deaths of Annabi's deputy, Luiz Carlos da Costa of Brazil, and the acting UN police commissioner, Doug Coates of Canada. Their bodies were buried in the rubble of UN headquarters in the Christopher Hotel.
The official UN death toll is now 40 but many more names are anticipated with the total expected to reach over 100 among the 12,000 peacekeepers and civilians with the world body in Haiti. The UN mission, designed to help Haiti enjoy some security and plan for development "is an effort now set back by this unimaginable catastrophe," said Susan E. Rice, the American ambassador to the UN.
Worst disaster for UN
UN casualties are small compared to the tens of thousands of Haitians who perished. But the tragedy is the worst one-day disaster in the history of the world body. The loss of life is even larger than the terrorist bombing in Baghdad in 2003 that killed 22 people, including the Sergio Vieira de Mello, the chief UN envoy in Iraq.
Annabi studied and had degrees in political science, English literature and international relations from institutions in Tunis, Paris and Geneva. He joined the United Nations 28 years ago, concentrating mainly on the political chaos in Cambodia. He was assigned to the peacekeeping department in 1992 and served as director of the Africa division until 1996, including the Rwanda debacle in 1994. In 1997 he became an assistant secretary-general.
"I think he had been deeply bruised by the tragedy of Rwanda, said Guéhenno, the former undersecretary-general for peacekeeping. "He felt that states are often more interested in posturing than changing the world. But he was a tenacious realist who would not give up"
Before going to Haiti, one of Annabi's his last tasks in organizing tens of thousands of peacekeepers was the operation in Darfur, in conjunction with the African Union. "Don't mention the word 'hybrid' to me again," he once told me, frustrated at dealing with even more politics than usual.
Secretary-General Ban, shortly after taking office in 2007, replaced all the top peacekeeping officials. "I remember that when his departure from the Department of Peacekeeping Operation was announced, the whole department went to his office, and nobody wanted to leave," Guéhenno said.
No seat at the table
By September 2007 Ban appointed Annabi to lead the UN Stabilization Mission in Haiti, known by its French acronym MINUSTAH, the first time he had led a mission on the ground and was said to be glad to be closer to those who had no seat at the diplomatic table.
Most of those who survived were on the lower floors of the Christopher Hotel. Annabi had been meeting with an eight-member Chinese police delegation in his top-floor office. The Chinese apparently had left and were trapped in a stairwell along with Alexandra Duguay, a young Canadian press officer, according to an entry on Hope for Alexandra Duguay on Facebook.
Mark Turner, a former Financial Times correspondent, went to Haiti with his wife Anna Shotton, a peacekeeping official who worked in the Christopher Hotel, and their two young children. They were on vacation in Miami when the disaster occurred. "Losing its civilian leadership is an enormous blow to the mission and the UN system as a whole. Of those UN officials that survived, many have left the country. The mission will need to rebuild its staff from the ground up," he wrote.
Writer James Traub related a conversation on The Daily Beast with Annabi after the UN Security Council in 2000 decided to send thousands of troops to keep a psychotic band of rebels known as the RUF from toppling the Sierra Leone government.
A delegation of 25 officials from the Clinton administration descended on his office, Annabi said. "And one of them just looked at me and said, 'What are you going to do about this mess?' And I said, 'Are you coming to tell me how I'm going to fix it with the troops you're not giving me, or are you coming to help me figure out how to fix it? Because if it's the first, this is going to be a short meeting.'"
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