Our friend Mochekes has launched a proposition to have the next Tunisian blogger meetup this coming Sunday, July 2nd.
He suggests to have it at 7PM in the Metallica Caf
Our friend Mochekes has launched a proposition to have the next Tunisian blogger meetup this coming Sunday, July 2nd.
He suggests to have it at 7PM in the Metallica Caf
The weather is disgusting…
I can’t find a better suited word to describe the weather today.
The heat is unbearable…
It almost feels like hell’s doors are wide open outside…
It’s near impossible to breathe; suffocating is more like what we’re doing…
Humidity is taking over, making you feel all yucky and sticky even if you still aren’t…
And what’s worse is that this is just the beginning…
Days like this aren’t meant to be work days.
I should be floating on the ice cold waters of the Mediterranean sea, on one of Bizerte’s beautiful beaches, relaxing and enjoying the refreshing feeling of the cool gentle waves surrounding and carrying my body, daydreaming about whatever fantasy I have at the moment.
I hate summer…
Or maybe, what I hate is not being able to enjoy summer like I used to when I was a kid in school’s summer break…
The Tunisian national team Roger Lemerre announced at a press conference in Tunis yesterday evening the list of 23 players who are to participate in the 2006 World Cup in Germany.
They are as follows:
Goalkeepers: Ali Boumnijel (Club Africain), Hamdi Kasraoui (Esperance Tunis), Adel Nefzi (US Monastir)
Defenders: David Jemmali (Bordeaux, France), Hatem Trabelsi (Ajax, Holland), Mehdi Meriah (Etoile du Sahel), Anis Ayari (Samsunspor, Turkey), Alaeddine Yahya (Saint-Etienne, France), Radhi Jaidi (Bolton, England), Karim Hagui (Strasbourg, France), Karim Saidi (Lecce, Italy)
Midfielders: Jawhar Menari (Nuremberg, Germany), Adel Chedli (Nuremberg, Germany), Mehdi Nafti (Birmingham City, England), Sofiene Melliti (Gaziantespor, Turkey), Hamed Namouchi (Rangers, Scotland), Karim Zdiri (Rosenborg, Norway), Yassine Chikhaoui (Etoile du Sahel), Riadh Bouazizi (Kayserispor, Turkey), Issam Jomaa (Lens, France), Kais Ghodhbane (Diyarbakirspor, Turkey)
Forwards: Francileudo Santos (Toulouse, France), Ziad Jaziri (Troyes, France)
The Carthage Eagles are in Group H with Spain, Ukraine and Saudi Arabia, who face them in their opening match in Munich on June 14th.
I hope we’ll see a great performance by the boys in this World Cup and maybe a passage to the second round. Keeping my fingers crossed.
Yesterday we had our 13th Tunisian blogger meetup in Zaghouan.
All fears that this meetup would be a failure because there was one a week before disappeared when we found that we were 18 people gathered in the meeting spot in downtown Tunis.
We drove to a caf
In my post about the last blogger meetup, I hinted that the long talked of Zaghouan blogger meetup would be following shortly.
Well guess what, it’s this upcoming Sunday; organized by our friend Karim.
The program is as follows:
– Meeting at 1PM in front of the Municipality on Carthage Avenue.
– Drive to Zaghouan.
– Lunch
– Picnic in the mountains of Zaghouan
As not everyone has a car, we’ll all be meeting together so that we can split ourselves between the available cars and then go together.
Please try to confirm your attendance by leaving a comment here, on Karim’s blog, or even on Tom‘s, in order to make the organization a bit easier.
As some of you already know, for the past months I’ve been covering the Tunisian blogosphere on Global Voices Online.
Global Voices Online is a non-profit global citizens
One of the things a lot of people I know have been shocked by when they came to Tunisia is the inexistence of any international fast food chains.
Yep, no McDonald’s, no Burger King, no KFC, no Domino’s, no Popeye’s, nothing. Even the couple of Pizza Huts we had here, which I’m not sure had the rights to the trademark, have been shut down.
Ok, I know, a lot of people think good riddance! And that we’re better off without those fast food chains for many reasons, starting with health on to other anti-globalization ideas.
But, let’s start by exploring the health side of it, it’s pretty much nonsense to say that having these chains open up will introduce unhealthy diets to people, because with or without them, people are eating fast food, only they’re doing it from crappy Tunisian substitutes that serve food that is even unhealthier.
People who would go to a McDonald’s or a Burger King, go to Baguette & Baguette, others who would go to KFC or Popeye’s go to Chickos, and the ones who would go to Pizza Hut or Domino’s end up in one of the thousands of Pizzarias.
But the difference is that the local counterparts serve low quality, unhealthy, tasteless food. I have yet to eat a good cheese burger, a tasty chicken meal, or a delicious thick stuffed crust pizza in Tunisia, even though I pay a relatively expensive price for what turns out to be a bad meal.
Just to make myself clear, I’m not talking about Tunisian fast food; God knows how much I love our kifteji, lablebi and other delicacies; I’m talking about the substitutes we have for those international chains and their meals.
And by the way, I’m not a big fan of the meals these chains provide, but every once in a while, I do feel like a double whopper or a good KFC meal or a stuffed crust pizza. And here, that’s nowhere to be found.
Now for the economic reasons, well the world is changing, whether we like it or not, we are in a cycle of globalization, and the whole world is opening up. Even though recent events like the whole US-UAE ports operations story and the French-Indian steel company one demonstrate that some would like it to be pretty one-sided, but eventually, this is a strong current that is going to pull everyone along.
Tunisia has been following a steady policy by which it is slowly opening up it’s economy to the global economy, and just like we’re seeing many international companies setting up shop in Tunisia, I think it’s time we let some international food chains in too.
I understand the fears that some people have about globalization erasing the original identity of the country and how these big chains would force other smaller local restaurants out of business, making it almost impossible to find an authentic Tunisian meal in Tunisia.
I’ve seen this in many countries I’ve visited, where you almost feel like cities are copy pasted all around the world, with the same restaurants, malls, clothes shops, …etc. But this is where the government and people should kick in, it’s our responsibility to keep these businesses alive, to support them and encourage their existence.
It’s also their responsibity to enhance their quality and bring themselves to a level where they can compete by providing a decent and delicious meal at a reasonable price.
Emirati company Emaar Properties PJSC yesterday announced its plans to develop the $1.88 billion Marina Al Qussor project on Tunisia’s eastern coastline.The 442 hectare Marina development is located within the governorate of Sousse towards the southern end of the Gulf of Hammamet and will offer a mix of living options and tourist attractions with a large Marina Village at its centre.
Emaar Chairman Mohamed Ali Alabbar presented the high profile project to the Tunisian President Zine El Abidine Ben Ali yesterday.
The various components of Marina Al Qussor range from over 4,000 residential units with villas, townhouses and apartments located on the lakeside, beach, marina and quayside; six hotels ranging from luxury boutique to four star located on the beach and marina, leisure facilities with the marina, yacht club, beach clubs, spa resort and sports club.
First of all, I think it’s great to see that more companies from the UAE are investing in Tunisia. The UAE has become one of the most important business centres in the world, and building bridges between the two countries is very good for both economies.
As for the project, Tunisia relies a lot on tourism, with it attracting 6.4 million tourists in 2005 and aiming for tourism revenue of close to $2 billion in 2006.
So from that point of view, this is yet another great project for Tunisia’s tourism industry, which I’m pretty sure will be very well done.
On the other hand, it’s a bit of a shame to see yet another tourism project pop up in that same region. It’s like tourism has eaten up all of Hammamet and Sousse, making them lose their Tunisian originality, which should be maintained as one of the main touristic attractions.
But then again, when you think of it, maybe it’s better if all these projects are centered in certain areas, and not spread out all over the country, so that some places can retain their purity and originality.
We got back from the 12th Tunisian blogger meetup a while ago, and what a meetup it was.
This meetup marks a year since we’ve been holding blogger meetups in Tunisia, and what a long way we’ve come ever since that first meetup that I organized, not knowing what to expect, and never dreaming that it would become such an anticipated monthly event, with different people eager to get involved with the organization every time.
When I look back on it all, it makes me so proud and so happy that I took that initial step.
Today’s meetup broke the record in the number of bloggers present with around 35 bloggers showing up, and the number of new faces exceeding old ones.
We actually took over a whole part of the caf