[1] In March 2002, Tunisian Prime Minister Mohamed Ghannouchi paid a visit to Mexico to attend the Monterrey Consensus and met with Mexican President Vicente Fox.
In 2012, Mexican Director General for Africa and Middle East, Sara Valdés, paid a visit to Tunis to meet with the head of the African Development Bank (which was based in Tunisia at the time).
[6] In March 2015, Mexico condemned the attack on the Bardo National Museum in Tunis where eight Mexican citizens happened to be at the time.
[9] Mexico's main exports to Tunisia include: telephones and mobile phones, machinery, sewing machines, chemical based products, rubber and plastic, motor cars and other vehicles, ferroalloys, pepper and vegetables.
Tunisia's main exports to Mexico include: electrical equipment, telephones and mobile phones, hydraulic cement, olive oil, clothing, instruments and apparatuses, chemical based products, parts and accessories for motor vehicles, and fruits.