List of diplomatic missions of Zimbabwe
This is a list of diplomatic missions of Zimbabwe, excluding honorary consulates. Following Ian Smith's Universal Declaration of Independence from the United Kingdom in 1965 Rhodesia's diplomatic presence was dramatically rolled back across the world. By the time of the Lancaster House Agreement in 1979 Rhodesia only had representative offices in London, Bonn, Pretoria, Washington, D.C. and Tokyo. Missions in Maputo (then Lourenço Marques) and Lisbon were closed in 1975 following the Carnation Revolution in Portugal. Under Robert Mugabe Zimbabwe ran a new foreign policy which operated more closely with African, Soviet and NAM states.
Africa
- Algeria
- Algiers (Embassy)
- Angola
- Luanda (Embassy)
- Botswana
- Gaborone (Embassy)
- Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Kinshasa (Embassy)
- Egypt
- Cairo (Embassy)
- Ethiopia
- Addis Ababa (Embassy)
- Ghana
- Accra (Embassy)
- Kenya
- Nairobi (Embassy)
- Libya
- Tripoli (Embassy)
- Malawi
- Lilongwe (Embassy)
- Mozambique
- Namibia
- Windhoek (Embassy)
- Nigeria
- Abuja (Embassy)
- South Africa
- Pretoria (Embassy)
- Johannesburg (Consulate-General)
- South Sudan
- Juba (Embassy)
- Sudan
- Khartoum (Embassy)
- Tanzania
- Dar es Salaam (Embassy)
- Zambia
- Lusaka (Embassy)
Asia
Europe
Multilateral organizations
- African Union
- Addis Ababa (Permanent Mission to the African Union)
- European Union
- Brussels (Mission to the European Union)
- United Nations
- Geneva (Permanent Mission to the United Nations and international organizations)
- New York City (Permanent Mission to the United Nations)
- UNESCO
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.