By:
Nana Appiah Acquaye
Central
Bank of Tunisia has convened key stakeholders in the country’s payments
ecosystem for a high-level dialogue aimed at user protection, transparency, and
inclusion in digital financial services.
The
event, organized as part of a broader needs assessment mission on the
protection of users of digital payment systems, brought together more than 60
participants, including representatives from financial institutions, payment
service providers, the postal sector, and international organizations.
Participants
included officials from the Organisation internationale de la Francophonie, the
Conseil Bancaire et Financier, as well as other ecosystem actors, who reviewed
findings from a study examining the current state of user protection in
Tunisia’s digital payments landscape.

Discussions
were structured around four key areas: assessing the existing regulatory and
operational framework, identifying and prioritizing user protection needs,
incorporating stakeholder feedback to co-develop practical solutions, and
strengthening collaboration among institutions to ensure effective
implementation.
The
initiative forms part of the “Promotion of Financial and Socio-Economic
Inclusion in Tunisia” project, supported by the German Federal Ministry for
Economic Cooperation and Development and co-funded by the European Union. The
project is being implemented by Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale
Zusammenarbeit.
Officials
said the dialogue marks an important step toward building a more inclusive and
resilient digital financial ecosystem, with a focus on ensuring that user
protection remains central as digital payment adoption continues to grow.