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Foreign relations of Ethiopia

The foreign relations of Ethiopia refers to overall diplomatic relationship of Ethiopia. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs oversees foreign relations and diplomatic missions of the country.

Nations with which Ethiopia has diplomatic relations

Ethiopia is one of few early African countries admitted to the League of Nations, becoming a member on 28 September 1923, and was one of the founding members of the United Nations. During the Scramble for Africa, Ethiopia had maintained its full sovereignty over European colonial power and fought the First Italo-Ethiopian War in 1895–96. However, the League did not protect in accord with the envisaged "collective security" of the country, resulted Italy's occupation of Ethiopia for 5 years (1936–1941).

From 1950s, Ethiopia participated to UN peacekeeping missions such as in Korean War and Congo Crisis. Virtually, Ethiopia maintains diplomatic relations to most countries, and is non-permanent member of the UN Security Council.

History Edit

Antiquity Edit

Land of Punt Edit

Punt (2500 BCE – 980 BCE) was predominantly a trading centre dominated by Ancient Egypt to Horn of Africa. Trading commodities includes exports of Egypt; one of the most essential was incense, which was mainly used for religious rituals for embalming corpse. Other were ivory, spices, hides and exotic animals that convey route to coast of Ethiopia, thus Ethiopia has been an integral part of Punt. Egyptian expedition to southeastern African region was generally commenced in the second millennium BC, after stabilizing relations with kingdoms of today's Sudan, the Kush, Napata and Meroë.[1]

South Arabia Edit

 
NASA capture of Arabic description of strait Bab el Mandeb. It is known for passage for South Arabian migration.

Some theorists hypothesized Ancient South Arabian people migrated out of Africa to the strait Bab-el-Mandeb when its sea level decreased to current status. When their civilization came to appear from 4th millennium BC, onward Mesopotamia and the Persian Gulf, adaptation of Semitic language was from end of Mediterranean, though they used Canaanite alphabet developed from Syria or Palestine during second millennium BC. Apparently, these languages similarity compared to Hebrew and Phoenician alphabets, even though lacked scholarly consensus. By 500 BC, it was widely spoken such as the Ge'ez language.[2]

Writing system through inscription on stone often detailed historical rival kingdoms in the region, most notability the Saba, Qataban, Himyar, Hadhramaut, Ma'in and others. In 1959, American archeologists collected numerous artifacts and body of inscriptions in the area, belonging to primary sources. The inscription not only detailed about South Arabia, but also the early Ethiopian history associated with Kingdom of Aksum and its rulers.[3]

Kingdom of Aksum Edit

 
Map of Eastern Hemisphere in the first century featuring trade route of Aksum with the rest powerful states

The Kingdom of Aksum has been a great power in classic Africa; once it has been referenced by Persian prophet Mani in the 3rd century and Greco-Roman trading guide Periplus of the Erythraean Sea in first century. Axum maintained well-defined foreign relations with powerful realms in the era. According to Stuart Munro-Hay witness, the Aksumite had several account of ambassadors that had delegation with neighboring powers. Occasionally, Aksumite contact with foreign powers also attested by archaeological or scarce finds.[4]

Egypt Edit

Aksumite relations with pre-Roman Egypt was ostensibly uncertain. However, it was considered that Aksumite contact were also existed during the fall of Ptolemaic dynasty with Cleopatra death in 30 BC. Few artifacts were uncovered from Egypt such as cippus of Horus given to Bruce, and illustrated by him, and a few amulet figurines of blue faience[4] or cornaline[4] found at various sites of Ethiopia. Other include the double-uraeus, perhaps brought from Meroë.[4]

Another discoveries are an inscription of Ptolemy III copied by Kosmas at Adulis and ankh'-sign engraved on one of the stelae. During King Ezana's reign, he expedited to the Nile after Meroë was entirely sacked. After its successor Noba emerged, it behaved badly to consign Aksumite ambassadors punished with military expedition. An aggressive mistreatment was objected by tribes such as the Mangurto, the Barya, and the Khasa by asking support, either regarded Aksum would an aide of Noba or possibly a suzerain. Ezana's expedition also attacked Kasu, the remnants of Meroitic state. Nuba, Kasu, and Beja were integral to Ezana's kingdom. Meroitic artifacts have been found in Ethiopian location Addi Galamo (Atse Dera) such as bronze bowls, which was brought from Roman Egypt. It was possibly made up of diorite thumb-ring found by the BIEA expedition at Aksum, and corna line amulet of Harpocrates with typical double-uraeus of the Meroites.[4]

South Arabia Edit

Saba, Himyar and Hadhramawit kingdom commonly known as South Arabian states—had special relations with Ethiopia. Culturally, linguistically, and socially, Aksumite civilization completely inspired by those overseas. While Aksumite intervention to states generally uncertain, it was viable to have a military expedition beginning in 3rd century. During the period of GDRT and Adhebah reign, (’DBH), Aksumite commenced a military treaty with Saba and then with Hadhramawit in the first half of third century.[4]

During Adhebah period, Shamir called Himyar prince Dhu-Raydan sent military aid from Aksum. Later, Aksumite king adopted nominally "king of Saba and Himyar", asserting suzerainty. Foreign contact also continued during the fifth and early sixth centuries between the two sides of Red Sea. Byzantine scholar Procopius told the voyage of crossing Red Sea for five days and nights and that "the harbor of the Homeritae from which they are accustomed to putting to sea is called Boulikas", presumably somewhere near Mukha, and " at the end of the sail across the sea they always put in at the harbor of the Adulitae" at the reign of King Kaleb.[4]

Arabian titles were experienced in South Arabia during Kaleb's reign; after his viceroy deposed by Jewish Himyar king Yusuf Asar, Yemen was no longer requisite to Aksum. The event led Aksumite to decline its dominion. An inscription dated to 543 AD mentioned that the new king named Abraha dealing with the restoration of great dam at Marib, and mentioned embassies from various foreign countries such as Aksum, Rome, Persia and various Arab groups. Procopius noted that Abreha was subordinated by Kaleb, a period which unbeknownst to Abreha regaining the kingdom reputations and he received little damage.[4]

Middle Ages Edit

 
"Preste" as the Emperor of Ethiopia, enthroned on a map of East Africa. From an atlas by the Portuguese cartographer Diogo Homem for Queen Mary, c. 1555–1559. (British Library)

Foreign relations in the Middle Ages have impacted by an interaction with Iberian countries—Spain and Portugal—especially the latter had considerable power on internal affairs. Portuguese influence spanned from 1500 to 1672, they had an interest of spreading Jesuit order from 1556 to 1632. According to their narrative effluence, the Portuguese authors underscored their involvement to Ethiopia, but overturned to smoothly decay. Portuguese authors works notably Francisco Álvares, Miguel de Castanhoso, and Pedro Páez survived to this day.[5] Prester John, a fabulous Christian king, spurred the Portuguese to pursue Ethiopia whose kingdom they equates with Garden of Eden. According to the legend, he was born about 1460 and last seen in 1526. There is also speculation about his age where he lived for fifteen or twenty seven years beyond 1526.

Pero da Covilhã profoundly marched overland into the Ethiopian Highlands about the end of 1492 or beginning of 1493, characterized by conquest and superiority. He sent an information to Lisbon a few years later that contributed Vasco da Gama mobilisation to African southern cap into the Indian Ocean. The Portuguese navy almost dominated the coastline of Eastern Hemisphere.[6]

In the early 15th century, Ethiopia sought to make diplomatic contact with European kingdoms for the first time since the Aksumite era. Atse Dawit I first made contact with the Republic of Venice by requesting for religious artifacts and craftsmen. A letter from Henry IV of England to the Ethiopian Emperor survives.[7] In 1428, Yeshaq I sent two emissaries to Alfonso V of Aragon, who sent his own emissaries that failed to complete the return trip home to Aragon.[8]

The first continuous relations with a European country began in 1508 with Portugal under Dawit II (Lebna Dengel), who had just inherited the throne from his father.[9] In 1487, King John II of Portugal sent two emissaries to the Orient, Pero da Covilhã and Afonso de Paiva; Afonso would die on this mission.[10] By the end of Middle Ages, the Ethiopian Empire was in a 13 year long war with neighboring Muslim states, and a Portuguese expedition force was sent from Goa, India to aid the Ethiopian Army due to an ongoing rivalry with the Ottoman Empire, who provided logistical support to the Adal Sultanate.[11][12]

Early modern period Edit

Gondarine period Edit

 
Emperor Susenyos I receives Latin Patriarch Afonso Mendes. Painted in 1713

Since 16th century, Roman Catholicism and the Jesuits increasingly influenced on state power. Besides, the Oromo migrations had vital role in the northern Ethiopia. Among other Jesuit, Spanish Jesuit Pedro Paez had favorable relations to the Emperors of Ethiopia like Za Dengel and Susenyos I, the latter promulgated that Roman Catholicism state administrative to the Empire in 1622 on behalf of Orthodox Tewahedo Church, resulted in grave conflict for the years.

The reign of Emperor Fasilides in 1632 arranged this status by restoring Orthodox Tewahedo state leadership and expelled Jesuits from his land. After founding Gondar in 1636, Ethiopia then prospered again with the beginning of "Gondarine period" characterized as relatively peaceful governance. However, few Franciscan and Capuchin friars said to be lived during the 18th century such as Franciscan Giuseppe Maria di Gerusalemme, Remedius Prutky (who left credible records to the city).

Architecture of this period was slightly influenced by the remnant Jesuits, but also the presence of Arab, Indians (brought by the Jesuits) as well as Turkish in Ottoman occupied northern area had involvement. One of the example is castles in Fasil Ghebbi.

Post-Zemene Mesafint Edit

 
The British expeditionary force moving artillery across the Ethiopian Highlands

Emperor Tewodros II reinstated the imperial power and foreign relations. His connection of Queen Victoria and other European leaders unfavorable when he sent unresponsive letter to the Queen, eventually leading to brief war with the British Empire. The British sent 13,000 soldiers, 26,000 men for logistical support and 40,000 animals including war elephants from India during their expedition, resulting in Tewodros suicide at Magdala in 1868. Not only modernized the empire, but he also paved the way of coherence the succession for subsequent emperors.[13] Ethiopia was briefly isolated from world power in the post-Zemene Mesafint period; Emperor Yohannes IV faced Egyptian invasion as they laid linkage of Suez Canal to Massawa, and opening road between Addi Quala and Gundet used to penetrate the Ethiopian Empire. Yohannes IV on other side was reluctant to improve the road from the Ethiopian Highland to the coast of Red Sea. According to British assistant John Kirkham, he "preferred to keep his money hoarded up". Likewise, German traveller Gerhard Rohlfs asserted that he wanted to build churches rather than roads. Road working, on the sides, was completed by Swedish missionaries at Monkulu. British traveller Augustus B. Wylde supposed that Abyssinians were "in fear of foreign invasion" where lastly commented "I suppose they are right".[14]

Wylde noted that the first Ethiopian diaspora took place in mid-1880s, who had been from Massawa to Europe, adapting European trousers. This was strictly outlawed by the Emperor. The empire nonetheless, was surged into modernization by foreign contribution, numerous missionary schools were expanded by Swedish Protestants at Monkulu and the French Lazarist at Keren, the later described by Wylde "a very useful education" with "very well conducted". Ethiopia had received broad European population in the 19th-century: Jean Baraglion of French origin who had lived for over a decade and according to Wylde, he enjoyed monopoly at Adwa. Despite rejoice, Baraglion encountered at least two rivals, a Hungarian named André who made an artificial limbs, and a Greek who have lived to Shewa over several years.[14]

Menelik II Edit

Ethiopia had strong diplomatic relations under Emperor Menelik II with Britain, France and Italy, the latter pursued hegemony to Ethiopian Empire after establishing colony in Eritrea (1882). The British and French rival with Italy due to insecurity with their respective protectorate in East Africa. However, both feared the process of Menelik's Expansions. In 1891, the British policy makers sent a circular note to the other world powers concerning the large portion of Nile Valley belonged to Ethiopia, "the activities and the pretension of the Negus were practically enough in themselves to bring the British to the support of Italian policy in East Africa."[15]

 
Ethiopia in 1909 illustrated by Edward Hertslet

On 2 May 1889, the Treaty of Wuchale was signed between Ethiopia and Italy with respective bilingual version. The treaty was signed after the Italian occupation of Eritrea and aimed to create friendship with both countries. The Amharic and Italian language, however confused by Article 17 in which Menelik denounced in 1893, resulting Italy's threatening over the status of newly formed boundary.

 
Menelik II at the Battle of Adwa

In 1895, the First Italo-Ethiopian War began, ending with Italy's defeat at Battle of Adwa by Ethiopian troops who were assisted logistically by Menelik. By early 1900, European agencies opened legation in Addis Ababa and had huge impact on investment in the country's infrastructure (schools, banks, road, railway etc.).

Haile Selassie Edit

During Haile Selassie coronation in 1930, emissaries from the United States, Egypt, Turkey, Sweden, Belgium, and Japan were also presented. Since then, he led the forefront diplomatic relations of Ethiopia with world powers.[16]

 
Italian artillery during the Second Italo-Ethiopian War, March 1936

In 1930s, Ethiopia faced Italian renewed imperialist design. Together with the failure of the League of Nations envision of Ethiopia's "collective security", Italy invaded Ethiopia again in October 1935, culminating in the Second Italo-Ethiopian War. In May 1936, Mussolini declared Ethiopia as part of Italian East Africa by merging with Eritrea and Somaliland. Haile Selassie fled to England's Fairfield House, Bath, and delivered an address that made him a worldwide figure, and the 1935 Time Man of the Year.

On 10 June 1940, Mussolini declared war on France and Britain and attacked British and Commonwealth forces in Egypt, Sudan, Kenya and British Somaliland. In January 1941, the British army together with Arbegnoch ("the Patriots") and Gideon Force occupied Ethiopia. On 5 May, Haile Selassie with auspice of Ethiopian Free Forces entered Addis Ababa and reclaimed his throne while the war continued until November. After their defeat, the Italian began guerrilla offensive in Ethiopia that lasted until the Armistice between Italy and Allied armed forces in September 1943.

 
Captain Elliot M. Senn, USN, escorts Emperor Haile Selassie aboard the U.S. (13 February 1945)

On 31 January 1942, the British and Ethiopia signed Anglo-Ethiopian Agreement which Britain recognized Ethiopian sovereignty, except military occupation of Ogaden with their colony in Somaliland and the former Italian colony of Somaliland, creating a single polity. Ethiopians discontent about the privilege of military administration of some south-eastern region until formal agreement signed on 19 December 1944 that ended British advantage in the Ethiopian regions. The Italian Republic signed peace treaty on 10 February 1947 that recognized Ethiopia's sovereignty with agreement to pay $25,000,000 in reparations.[17]

In 1952, Eritrea federated with Ethiopia with majority vote in the United Nations and this attitude declined by 1961, culminating in the Eritrean War of Independence since armed forces formed such as the Eritrean Liberation Front (ELF).

 
Eritrean War of Independence map in 1970s

Oppositions against Haile Selassie came to existence with students began marching through 1960s and early 1970s, chanting "land for tiller" and embracing several Marxist-Leninist theme.[18] Haile Selassie deposed on 12 September 1974 by officers of Ethiopian Army led by Aman Andom named Coordinating Committee of the Armed Forces, Police and Territorial Army. The committee renamed itself Provisional Military Administrative Council known as the Derg after abolishing the Ethiopian Empire in March 1975.

The Derg era Edit

The Derg aligned itself with Soviet bloc—had similar Marxist Leninist policy on Ethiopia. The Derg suffered from internal insurgency and ambivalent relations with neighboring countries such as Eritrea and Somalia. In 1977, the Ogaden War was fought between the Derg supported by Cuba, Soviet Union and South Yemen, and Somalia with the United States and Egypt. Although ending on 15 March 1978, the relations between Ethiopia and Somalia marred with political dispute with involvement of the Ogaden National Liberation Front (ONLF) in relations of the disputed Ogaden region.

 
Mengistu Haile Mariam (fifth in row) at SED Party Congress in Berlin, April 1986

By the 1990, the Derg and Soviet Union relations was deteriorated after Mengistu Haile Mariam banned the Ethiopian media to use the term glasnost and perestroika, defying Mikhail Gorbachev who was believed has not fondness for him. By early 1990, Mengistu helped emigration of the Ethiopian Jews to Israel by which many Jewish organizations and US Congress discerned Mengistu's task in the lobbying effort.[19]

Federal Democratic Republic era Edit

 
Prime Minister Meles Zenawi with Russian President Vladimir Putin on 3 December 2001
 
Former US Secretary of State John Kerry with Hailemariam Desalegn in 2014
 
Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed with Eritrean president Isaias Afwerki meeting on 3 March 2019

After defeating the Derg in 1991, the newly formed coalition the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front (EPRDF), led by President and later Prime Minister Meles Zenawi, experienced opposition from factions in Somalia as well as within the country; in May 1991, a pan-Islamist Al-Itihaad al-Islamiya (Islamic Unity) established to consolidate Somalia's power in the Greater Somalia. Relations with Eritrea was somewhat better intensified after its UN-sponsored session from Ethiopia in May 1993.

Later in 1998, their relations was deteriorated after large-scale Eritrean mechanized force penetrated to Badme region, triggering the Eritrean–Ethiopian War. Both countries spent favorable amount of armaments ahead of the war and suffered reportedly 100,000 casualties combined as a direct consequence thereof, excluding indeterminate number of refugees.[20][21][22][23] In December 2000, the two countries government signed Algiers Agreement which finalized the war and created binding judicial commissions, the Eritrea–Ethiopia Border Commission and the Eritrean–Ethiopian Claims Commissions, to oversee the disputed border and related claims. Since then, there was elevated tensions with border conflict and stalemate what is described "war footing" and "no-war-no-peace" with absence of foreign and domestic policy domination. This was ended after Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed came to power in 2018, signed the 2018 Eritrea–Ethiopia summit on 8–9 July.[24]

Meles' government relations with Djibouti was friendly as Djibouti accessed Port of Djibouti to Ethiopia. Ethiopia had 90% imports arrived from Port of Djibouti and 95% of Djiboutian regional exports.[25] In 2006, the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) virtually controlled the whole of southern Somalia and successfully united Mogadishu and imposed Shari'a law. With support of the Transitional Federal Government of Somalia, Ethiopia, under UN peacekeeping mission against War on Terrorism, attacked ICU. The ICU's split eventually led to the formation of Al-Shabaab, regrouping to continue the insurgency against TFG and Ethiopian military presence in Somalia.[26]

In May 2010, the Nile Basin Initiative was signed by five upstream countries such as Ethiopia, Tanzania, Uganda, Kenya, and Rwanda and Burundi as Egypt considerate as breach to the 1929 Anglo-Egyptian treaty that gave its right to share water.[27] On 2 April 2011, the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam (GERD) inaugurated construction expected producing 15,000 megawatts of power within 10 years, spending 12 billion dollars of strategy to improve power generating capabilities. Egypt and Sudan continued objecting the filling of the dam in 2020.[28][29]

Under Abiy Ahmed premiership since 2018, Ethiopia repleted its relations Somalia and Eritrea. In October 2018, Ethiopia signed peace agreement with the rebel faction ONLF ending 34 year long conflict since 1984. ONLF has clashed with the Ethiopian troops to contain vast oil and gas deposits, where Chinese oil firms developing two gas field in the area. In 2007, ONLF launched deadly attack against Chinese-run oil field which killed 65 Ethiopians and 9 Chinese nationals.[30]

During the Tigray War, Ethiopia was allied to countries such as Turkey,[31] United Arab Emirates[32] and Iran[31] who supplied drones to the Ethiopian government.[13] With involvement of Eritrean Defence Forces (EDF), the US President Joe Biden designated six targets of sanction per Executive Order 14046, which was signed in September 2021.[33]

Africa Edit

Country Formal Relations Began Notes
  Algeria
  • Algeria has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  • Ethiopia closed its embassy in Algiers in 2021.
  Angola 13 July 1977 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 13 July 1977[34]
  Benin 7 May 1966 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 7 May 1966 when first Ambassador of Ethiopia to Dahomey ( resident in Lagos ) Mr. Dawit Abdou presented his credentials.[35]
  Burkina Faso 11 April 1968 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 11 April 1968 when the first Ethiopian ambassador to Upper Volta , Ato Haile Mechecha , has presented his credentials to President Lamizana[36]
  Burundi 9 June 1965 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 9 June 1965 when the Burundi government has appointed its Ambassador in Addis Ababa, Pascar Bugiriza[37]
  Central African Republic 15 September 1970 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 15 September 1970[38]
  Chad 21 October 1969 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 21 October 1969 when the first Ambassador of Chad to Ethiopia , M. Abdurahman Musa , presented his credentials to Emperor Haile Selassie[39]
  Côte d'Ivoire 4 March 1966 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 4 March 1966 when first Ambassador of Ethiopia in Cote d'Ivoire presented his credentials[40]
  • Côte d'Ivoire has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Abidjan.
  Djibouti See Djibouti–Ethiopia relations

Diplomatic relations between Ethiopia and Djibouti were established in 1984.[41] The border between the two countries is based on the Franco-Ethiopian convention of 20 March 1897, which was later finalized in a protocol dated 16 January 1954 and rendered effective on 28 February of that year.[42] In October 1991, the Ethiopian and Djiboutian governments signed a Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation further solidifying relations. Since 1991, the two countries have signed over 39 protocol agreements.[41]

Djibouti remains a major economic partner of Ethiopia. On 13 April 2002, the two countries signed an agreement concerning the use of the Port of Djibouti and the transit of cargo, which was later ratified by the Ethiopian Federal Parliamentary Assembly on 4 June of the same year.[43] About 70% of the Port of Djibouti's activity consists of imports to and exports from neighboring Ethiopia, which depends on the harbour as its main maritime outlet. The port also serves as an international refueling center and transshipment hub.[44] Additionally, both countries share ownership of the Addis Ababa-Djibouti Railroad.

  Egypt See Egypt–Ethiopia relations

As two of the oldest independent states in Africa, both countries have an ancient relationship in many forms. The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church was under the administration of the Coptic Orthodox Church from ancient times until 1959. Ethiopian and Egyptian armies clashed in the early 19th century over control of territory in what is modern Sudan, and Ethiopia's access to the Red Sea. Both countries established formal diplomatic ties in 1927.[45] More recently, because both countries share a special relationship over the Nile basin, both are members of the Nile Basin Initiative. In 2010s, both countries relationship was deteriorated as a result of Ethiopia failed to reach trilateral agreement with Sudan regarding the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam project advanced.

In 2021, Ethiopia closed its embassy in Cairo due to financial reasons.[46]

  Eritrea 22 May 1993 See Eritrea–Ethiopia relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 22 May 1993 when first Ambassador of the Transitional Government of Ethiopia's to Eritrea Mr. Awalom Woldu Tuku presented his credentials to President Issaias Afwerki.[47] Diplomatic relations were broken on 12 May 1998 when Ethiopia and Eritrea went to war over the disputed border area of Badme.[48] Diplomatic relations were restored on 8 July 2018[49]

  • The boundary between these two countries is based on three treaties between Ethiopia and Italy, in 1900, 1902, and 1908. However no part of the shared boundary was afterwards demarcated.[50]
  • From 1950 until 1993, Eritrea was federated as part of Ethiopia. During much of this period, a number of Eritreans fought for independence from Ethiopia. The federation was ended with an April 1993 plebiscite which approved Eritrea's full independence.
  • Disputes over Eritrea's border alignment led to the Eritrean-Ethiopian War (1998–2000), which was resolved by an independent boundary commission's delimitation decision in 2002. However, demarcation has been delayed, despite intense international intervention, by Ethiopian insistence that the decision ignored "human geography," made technical errors in the delimitation, and determined that certain disputed areas, specifically Badme, fall to Eritrea. Eritrea meanwhile insists on not deviating from the commission's decision. The peacekeepers monitoring the disputed boundary were forced to withdraw in July 2008[51] having considered their remaining options[52] after experiencing serious difficulties in supporting its troops.[53]
  • In July 2018, leaders both countries signed a peace treaty to put a formal end to a state of war between both nations paving the way for greater economic cooperation and improved ties between them.[54]
  Eswatini 1 January 1971 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 1 January 1971 when the first Swaziland Ambassador to Ethiopia, Mr. Martin Ndiniso, has presented his credentials to Emperor Haile Selassie.[55]
  Gambia 17 October 1966 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 17 October 1966[56]
  Ghana
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Accra.
  • Ghana has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Guinea 22 June 1962 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 22 June 1962 when Guinea Ambassador to United Arab Republic (Egypt) Mr. Seydou Diallo was received by Emperor Haile Selassie as Ambassador also to Ethiopia[57]
  Kenya 26 June 1964 See Ethiopia–Kenya relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 26 June 1964 and opened Ethiopian Embassy in Nairobi.[58][59]

Relations between Kenya and Ethiopia date back to the 1954, when the Ethiopian authorities under Haile Selassie I established an honorary consulate general in the British Kenya Colony. In 1961, prior to Kenya's independence, Ethiopia appointed its first ambassador to Kenya, and six years later Kenya opened an embassy in Addis Ababa.[60]

The border between the two countries is based on a treaty signed by Ethiopia and Kenya on 9 June 1970, which determines the present-day boundary, abrogating all previous boundary treaties. This border has been subjected to demarcation.[61]

  Malawi 30 June 1964 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 30 June 1964 when the first Malawi Ambassador to Ethiopia, Mr. Katenga, arrived in Addis Ababa.[62]
  Mali 23 March 1964 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 23 March 1964 when first Ambassador of the Republic of Mali , Mr. Modibo Diallo , has presented his credentials to Emperor Haile Selassie[63]
  Mauritania 21 September 1966 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 21 September 1966.[64]
  Morocco
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Rabat.
  • Morocco has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Namibia

Ethiopia–Namibia relations refers to the current and historical relationship between Ethiopia and Namibia.

During the South African occupation of Namibia, Ethiopia was one of the country's leading proponents abroad; Ethiopia and Liberia were the first two states to bring the question of independence for then South West Africa to the United Nations.[65] Namibia gained independence in 1990. In 2007, the two governments signed an agreement which expanded air travel between the two states.[66] In December 2009, Namibia's Foreign Minister, Marko Hausiku met with Ethiopian Foreign Affairs Minister Seyoum Mesfin and noted the economic, science, technical and cultural agreements in place between the two countries and expressed a desire to improve the trade relations.[67]

  • Ethiopia is accredited to Namibia from its embassy in Pretoria, South Africa.
  • Namibia has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Niger 6 October 1965 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 6 October 1965 when first Ambassador of Ethiopia to Niger (resident in Lagos) Mr. Dawit Abdou presented his credentials[68]
  Nigeria
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Abuja.
  • Nigeria has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Rwanda 26 October 1966 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 26 October 1966[69]
  Senegal
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Dakar.
  • Senegal has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Seychelles 14 April 1982 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 14 April 1982[70]
  Sierra Leone 26 March 1968 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 26 March 1968[71]
  Somalia See Ethiopia–Somalia relations

Relations between the peoples of Somalia and Ethiopia stretch back to antiquity, to a common origin. The Ethiopian region is one of the proposed homelands of the Horn of Africa's various Afro-Asiatic communities.[72]

During the Middle Ages, Somali Imam Ahmad ibn Ibrihim al-Ghazi (Ahmad Gurey or Gragn) led a Conquest of Abyssinia (Futuh al-Habash), which brought three-quarters of the Christian Ethiopian Empire under the power of the Muslim Adal Sultanate.[73][74] With an army mainly composed of Somalis,[75] Many historians trace the origins of tensions between Somalia and Ethiopia to this war.[76]

In the 1960s and 1970s, a territorial dispute over the Ogaden region led to various armed confrontations between the Somalian and Ethiopian militaries. The tensions culminated in the Ogaden War, which saw the Somali army capture most of the disputed territory by September 1977, before finally being expelled by a coalition of communist forces.

With changes in leadership in the early 1990s brought on by the start of the Somali Civil War and Ethiopian Civil War, respectively, relations between the Somali and Ethiopian authorities entered a new phase of military cooperation against the Islamic Courts Union (ICU) rebel group and its more radical successor Al-Shabaab. In October 2011, a coordinated multinational operation began against Al-Shabaab in southern Somalia; the Ethiopian military eventually joined the Transitional Federal Government-led mission the following month.[77]

The Federal Government of Somalia was later established on 20 August 2012,[78] representing the first permanent central government in the country since the start of the civil war.[78] The following month, Hassan Sheikh Mohamud was elected as the new Somali government's first President, with the Ethiopian authorities welcoming his selection and newly appointed Prime Minister of Ethiopia Hailemariam Desalegn attending Mohamud's inauguration ceremony.[79]

  South Africa 6 January 1995 See Ethiopia–South Africa relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 6 January 1995[80]

  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Pretoria.
  • South Africa has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Sudan 27 June 1956 See Ethiopia–Sudan relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 27 June 1956 when accredited first Ambassador of Ethiopia to Sudan Mr. Ato Mellas M. Andom.[81]

Alodia and the Kingdom of Makuria had some relations with Ethiopia in Medieval times.

The Ethiopian Empire fought against Mahdist Sudan in the Mahdist War.

Ethiopia and Sudan first established formal relations in 1956.[82] Relations between Ethiopia and Sudan were very good following the end of the Ethiopian Civil War, due to the support that the Sudanese government had given to the Ethiopian People's Revolutionary Democratic Front. However, relations were strained for a time following the 26 June 1995 assassination attempt against Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak as he was leaving the OAU summit meeting in Addis Ababa. The subsequent investigation revealed that Sudan was involved in this act, forcing the Ethiopian government to take a series of steps against Sudan that September, which included closing the Sudanese consulate in Gambela, reducing the number of Sudanese embassy staff, and terminating all Sudan Airways and Ethiopian Airlines flights between the two countries. However the start of the Eritrean-Ethiopian War led to Sudan and Ethiopia put this conflict between them and normalizing their relations by November 1999 when president Omar Hassan al-Bashir made a formal visit to Addis Ababa.[83]

A protocol concerning Ethiopian access to Port Sudan was signed between the two countries 5 March 2000 in Khartoum, and this protocol and its subsequent amendment were ratified by the Ethiopian Federal Parliamentary Assembly on 3 July 2003.[84]

Efforts to demarcate the porous boundary with Sudan were delayed by the Second Sudanese Civil War. In May 2008, residents along the western Ethiopian border reportedly discovered that the government had agreed to demarcate this boundary when Sudanese soldiers forced them out of their homes. It was reported that as many as 2,000 people were displaced in the Gambela Region, and the Sudanese army reportedly set fire to two dozen Ethiopian farms and imprisoned 34 people in the Amhara Region. However, Prime Minister Meles Zenawi publicly denied that any Ethiopians had been displaced by this agreement.[85] Negotiations over this boundary continues, with the twelfth meeting of the Boundary Commission announced 28 December 2009 at Mek'ele, with Ethiopian representatives from the Tigray, Benishangul-Gumuz, Amhara and Gambela Regions, and from the Sudanese side representatives of the Upper Nile, Blue Nile, Sennar and Al Qadarif Administrations.[86]

Despite these border tensions, Sudan remains a major economic partner of Ethiopia. According to the Ethiopian Petroleum Supplier Enterprise (EPSE), Ethiopia in April 2013 imported around $1.12 billion worth of oil from Sudan over the previous six months. In total, about 85% of Ethiopia's yearly oil consumption comes from Sudan via the Port of Djibouti. Ethiopia and Sudan are also in the process of linking their power grids.[87] In 2010s, Sudan—Egypt—Ethiopia joint relations was deteriorated as a result of Ethiopia failed to reach trilateral agreement regarding the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam project advanced. During Tigray War in 2020, there was undissolved clash between their border, furtherly aggravated their relation.[88]

  Tanzania 1 June 1964 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 1 June 1964 when Ethiopia's Ambassador Ato Mekasha, presents his credentials[89]
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Dar-es-Salaam.
  • Tanzania has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Togo 11 December 1982 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 11 December 1982 when Ambassador of Ethiopia (resident in Accra) Mr. Kasate Berham Babina presented letters of credence to President of Togo Gnassingbe Eyadema.[90]
  Tunisia 31 July 1962 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 31 July 1962[91]
  Uganda 4 June 1964 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 4 June 1964 when accredited first Ambassador of Ethiopia to Uganda (resident in Nairobi) Mr. Ato Getachew Mekasha[92]
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Kampala.
  • Uganda has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Zambia 8 July 1965 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 8 July 1965 when Chief Mapanza has been appointed the Zambian Ambassador to Ethiopia[93]
  Zimbabwe
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Harare.
  • Zimbabwe has an embassy in Addis Ababa.

Americas Edit

Country Formal Relations Began Notes
  Argentina 28 March 1968 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 28 March 1968[94]
  • Argentina has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  • Ethiopia is accredited to Argentina from its embassy in Brasília, Brazil.
  Bolivia 8 December 1987 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 8 December 1987[95]
  Brazil 9 January 1951 See Brazil–Ethiopia relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 9 January 1951 when was accredited first Minister of Ethiopia to Brazil Mr. Blatta Dawit Ogbazgy[96]

  • Brazil has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Brasília.
  Canada 13 October 1965 See Canada–Ethiopia relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 13 October 1965[97]

  • Canada has an embassy in Addis Ababa.[98]
  • Ethiopia closed its embassy in Ottawa in 2021.
  • See also: Ethiopian Canadian
  Chile 16 October 1945 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 16 October 1945[99]
  • Chile has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  • Ethiopia does not have an accreditation to Chile
  Colombia 30 May 1967 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 30 May 1967[100]
  Cuba 18 July 1975 See Cuba–Ethiopia relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 18 July 1975[101]

  • Cuba has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Havana.
  Ecuador 23 January 2012 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 23 January 2012[102]
  • Ecuador is accredited to Ethiopia from its embassy in Cairo, Egypt.
  • Ethiopia does not have an accreditation to Ecuador.
  Grenada 17 September 1979 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 17 September 1979[103]
  Guatemala 20 June 2012 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 20 June 2012[104]
  Guyana 13 October 1970

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 13 October 1970.[105]

  Jamaica 22 March 1966 See Jamaica–Ethiopia relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 22 March 1966[106]

  • Jamaica has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Kingston.
  Mexico 1 November 1949 See Ethiopia–Mexico relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 1 November 1949[107]

  • During the Second Italo-Ethiopian War, Mexico was one of the member states of the League of Nations to condemn the occupation of Ethiopia and support the League's sanctions against Italy.[108] Since then, relations between the two nations have strengthened.
  • In Addis Ababa, Ethiopia named a square in the capital "Mexico Square." Mexico, in turn, named a metro station in Mexico City called Metro Etiopía.
  • Mexico has an embassy in Addis Ababa.[109]
  • Ethiopia is accredited to Mexico from its embassy in Washington, D.C., United States.[110]
  Nicaragua 7 May 1984 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 7 May 1984[111]
  Panama 17 August 1967 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 17 August 1967[112]
  Peru 10 September 1967 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 10 September 1967[113]
  Saint Kitts and Nevis 1 March 2017 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 1 March 2017[114]
  Saint Lucia 3 August 2004 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 3 August 2004[115]
  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 16 February 2004 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 16 February 2004[116]
  Trinidad and Tobago 7 July 1965 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 7 July 1965 when was appointed first Ambassador of Trinidad and Tobago to Ethiopia Mr. George Daniel[117]
  United States 27 December 1903 See Ethiopia–United States relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 27 December 1903[118]

  • Ethiopia is a strategic partner of the United States in the Global War on Terrorism.
  • U.S. development assistance to Ethiopia is focused on reducing famine vulnerability, hunger, and poverty and emphasizes economic, governance, and social sector policy reforms.
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Washington, D.C., and a consulate-general in Los Angeles.[110]
  • United States has an embassy in Addis Ababa.[119]
  • See also: Ethiopian American
  Uruguay 23 March 2011 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 23 March 2011[120]
  • Ethiopia does not have an accreditation to Uruguay.
  • Uruguay has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Venezuela 20 July 1950 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 20 July 1950[121]
  • Ethiopia does not have an accreditation to Venezuela.
  • Venezuela has an embassy in Addis Ababa.

Asia Edit

Country Formal Relations Began Notes
  Armenia 2 December 1993 See Armenia–Ethiopia relations
  • Both countries established diplomatic relations on 2 December 1993[122]
  • Armenia has an embassy in Addis Ababa.[123]
  • Ethiopia is accredited to Armenia from its embassy in Moscow, Russia.[124]
  • Both nations have among the oldest Christian communities
  Azerbaijan 2 November 1992 See Azerbaijan–Ethiopia relations
  • On November 2, 1992, Azerbaijan and Ethiopia signed a Protocol on the establishment of diplomatic relations.[125]
  • Azerbaijan has an embassy in Addis Ababa.[125]
  • Ethiopia maintains an honorary consulate in Baku, Azerbaijan.[126]
  Bahrain 28 November 1999 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 28 November 1999[127]
  Bangladesh 19 September 1976 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 19 September 1976 when Mr. Mohammad Sultan, Bangladesh Ambassador to Egypt, has been accredited concurrently to Ethiopia.[128]
  China 24 November 1970 See China–Ethiopia relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 24 November 1970[129]

  Georgia 29 June 1993 See Ethiopia–Georgia relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 29 June 1993[130]

  India 1 July 1948 See Ethiopia–India relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 1 July 1948[131]

  Indonesia See Ethiopia–Indonesia relations
  Iraq 14 September 1949 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 14 September 1949[132]
  Israel 24 October 1961 See Ethiopia–Israel relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 24 October 1961 when Ethiopia recognized Israel de jure, and agreed to raise the consulate in Addis Ababa to the level of an embassy.[133] Ethiopia severance diplomatic relations with Israel on 23 October 1973.[134] Diplomatic relations were resumed on 3 November 1989[135]

  Japan 1930 See Ethiopia–Japan relations
  • Japan and Ethiopia explored diplomatic and economic relations in the 1930s in response to perceived common interests; however these contacts lapsed with the commencement of the Second Italo-Ethiopian War
  • Relations were reestablished in 1955 and ambassadors exchanged in 1958.[138]
  Jordan 16 May 1960 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 16 May 1960[139]
  Kazakhstan 5 September 2011 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 5 September 2011[140]
  Kuwait 9 October 1966 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 9 October 1966[141]
  Laos 9 December 2005 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 9 December 2005[142]
  Lebanon 31 July 1949 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 31 July 1949 when was accredited first Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of Ethiopia to Lebanon Mr. Fitaorari Tafesse Habte Mikael[143]
  Malaysia See Ethiopia–Malaysia relations
  • Ethiopia has a consulate-general in Kuala Lumpur,[144] while Malaysia doesn't have any embassy in Ethiopia.
  • Malaysia is one of the major trade partner and also one of the largest investors in Ethiopia.[145][146][147]
  Maldives 6 August 2018 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 6 August 2018[148]
    Nepal 15 April 1971 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 15 April 1971[149]
  North Korea 1975

Both countries established diplomatic relations in 1975.[150]

  Oman 7 February 1995 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 7 February 1995[151]
  Pakistan 28 December 1957 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 28 December 1957[152]
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Islamabad.
  • Pakistan has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Palestine 1989

Palestine has an embassy in Addis Ababa.

  Philippines 7 February 1977

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 7 February 1977[153]

The Philippines and Ethiopia signed their first air agreement in 2014.[154]

  Qatar 16 July 1995 See Ethiopia–Qatar relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 16 July 1995[155]

  • Ethiopia abruptly broke diplomatic ties with Qatar in April 2008, apparently due to statements made by the Al-Jazeera news channel which is based in Qatar.
  Saudi Arabia 25 May 1949 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 25 May 1949 when Minister of Ethiopia to Saudi Arabia (Resident in Cairo) Mr. Taffassa Hapte Mikael presented his credentials.[156]
  South Korea 23 December 1963

Between The Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia and The Republic of Korea were established diplomatic relations on 23 December 1963.[157]

  • Infantry men of 6,037 from Ethiopia have participated in the Korean War to help South Korea.
  • The number of South Koreans living in Ethiopia in 2016 were about 460.
  • The Republic of Korea's official development assistance from 1991 to 2014 was about 88.61m USD.
    • The Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia has an embassy in Seoul.[158]
    • Since 1965 South Korea has an embassy in Addis Ababa.[159]
  Syria 26 August 1980 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 26 August 1980[160]
  Turkey 1896[161] See also Ethiopia–Turkey relations
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Ankara.[161]
  • Turkey has an embassy in Addis Ababa.[161]
  • Trade volume between the two countries was US$398.8 million in 2019 (Ethiopian exports/imports: 27.5/378.3 USD).[161]
  United Arab Emirates 5 May 1993 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 5 May 1993[162]

Europe Edit

Country Date Notes
  Austria 23 July 1948 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 23 July 1948[163]
  Belarus 18 May 1994 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 18 May 1994[164]
  • Belarus is accredited to Ethiopia from its embassy in Nairobi, Kenya.
  • Ethiopia is accredited to Belarus from its embassy in Moscow, Russia.
  Belgium 25 March 1923 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 25 March 1923 when Consulate General of Belgium transformed into a Legation and the first Minister Plenipotentiary is Maxime Gerard [165]
  Bosnia and Herzegovina 12 February 2007 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 12 February 2007[166]
  Bulgaria 3 July 1956 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 3 July 1956[167]
  Cyprus See Cyprus–Ethiopia relations
  Czech Republic 11 February 1944 Czechoslovakia and Ethiopia established diplomatic relations on 11 February 1944. The Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia (FDRE) recognized the new Czech Republic as on January 1, 1993 and established diplomatic relations accordingly.[168]
  • Ethiopia is accredited to the Czech Republic from its embassy in Berlin, Germany.
  • Czech Republic has an embassy in Addis Ababa.[169]
  Denmark 21 February 1950 See Denmark–Ethiopia relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 21 February 1950 when first Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of Denmark to Ethiopia (resident of Athens) Mr. Hubert Wichfeld presented his credentials.[170] 20 January 1967 both countries was raised their diplomatic missions to Embassy level[171]

  • Denmark has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  • Ethiopia is accredited to Denmark from its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
  Estonia 23 August 2005 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 23 August 2005[172]
  Finland 17 July 1959 See Ethiopia–Finland relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 17 July 1959[173]

  • Ethiopia is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm, Sweden.
  • Finland has an embassy in Addis Ababa.[174]
  France 20 March 1897 See Ethiopia–France relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 20 March 1897[175]

  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Paris.
  • France has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Germany 7 March 1905 See Ethiopia–Germany relations
  • Both countries established diplomatic relations when signed a treaty of friendship on 7 March 1905;[176] a German Legation was opened in Addis Ababa in 1907, and an Ethiopian embassy in Berlin the same year.
  • Germany supported Ethiopia in the Second Italo-Abyssinian War.[citation needed]
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Berlin.
  • Germany has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Greece See Ethiopia–Greece relations
  • Ethiopia is accredited to Greece from its embassy in Rome, Italy.
  • Greece has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Hungary 17 November 1959 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 17 November 1959[177]
  Iceland 20 May 1968 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 20 May 1968[178]
  Ireland 1994 See Ethiopia–Ireland relations
  • Ethiopia closed its embassy in Dublin in 2021.
  • Since 1994, Ireland has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Italy 1889 See Ethiopia–Italy relations
  • Italy was one of the first European countries to open diplomatic relations with Ethiopia.
  • Both countries have fought two wars against each other: the First Italo-Ethiopian War and the Second Italo-Ethiopian War
  • Total trade volume between two countries reached 455,928,352.26 Birr in 2011.[179]
  • Italy has an embassy in Addis Ababa.[180]
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Rome.[181]
  Latvia 11 March 2008 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 11 March 2008[182]
  Lithuania 19 October 1998 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 19 October 1998[183]
  Luxembourg 19 March 1980 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 19 March 1980 when accredited first Ambassador of Ethiopia to Luxembourg (resident in Brussels) Dr. Ghebray Berhane[184]
  Malta 30 November 1982 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 30 November 1982[185]
  Montenegro 10 June 2011 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 10 June 2011[186]
  North Macedonia 17 July 2000 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 17 July 2000[187]
  Poland 14 July 1945 See Ethiopia–Poland relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 14 July 1945[188]

  • Ethiopia is accredited to Poland from its embassy in Berlin, Germany.
  • Poland has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Portugal 4 July 1984 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 4 July 1984[189]
  Romania 2 July 1957 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 2 July 1957[190]
  • Ethiopia is accredited to Romania from its Permanent Mission in Geneva, Switzerland.
  • Romania has an embassy in Addis Ababa.[191]
  Russia 1943-4-21 See Ethiopia–Russia relations
  • Russia has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Moscow. The Ethiopian ambassador to Russia is also accredited to Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, and Uzbekistan.
  • The history of this relationship has its origins in the 19th century. Russia supplied the mountain guns the Ethiopian army used in the Battle of Adwa.
  • More recently, the Soviet Union was a major source of military and economic aid under the Derg and during the People's Democratic Republic of Ethiopia.
  • See also Alexander Bulatovich
  • Relations are somewhat unsure owing to Russia's close ties with Ethiopia's neighboring rival, Sudan.
  Serbia 4 March 1952 See Ethiopia–Serbia relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 4 March 1952[192]

  • Serbia has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  • Ethiopia is accredited Serbia from its embassy in Rome, Italy.
  • Ethiopia is a strong advocate for Serbia on the issue of Kosovo.
  • The first vessel in the Ethiopian Navy was a gift from Yugoslavia.
  • The Serbian embassy is the former villa of Yugoslav President Josip Broz Tito, which was given as a gift by Haile Selassie
  • On 27 January 2012, after traveling to Addis Ababa in order to reaffirm Ethiopia's stance on Kosovo regarding Serbia, Vuk Jeremić and Haile Mariam signed a memorandum of understanding between the two nations' ministries of foreign affairs.[193]
  Slovakia 10 May 1995 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 10 May 1995[194]
  Spain 27 April 1951 See Ethiopia–Spain relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 27 April 1951[195]

  • Ethiopia is accredited to Spain from its embassy in Paris.
  • Spain has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Sweden See Ethiopia–Sweden relations
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Stockholm.
  • Sweden has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Ukraine 1 April 1993 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 1 April 1993[196]
  • Ethiopia is accredited to Ukraine from its embassy in Moscow.
  • Ukraine has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  United Kingdom 3 December 1903 See Ethiopia–United Kingdom relations

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 3 December 1903 when appointed first Minister Plenipotentiary of United Kingdom to the Abyssinia Sir John Lane Harrington[197]

Oceania Edit

Country Formal Relations Began Notes
  Australia 13 December 1965 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 13 December 1965 when accredited first Ambassador of Australia to Ethiopia Mr. W. R. Crocker[198]
  • Australia has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  • Ethiopia has an embassy in Canberra.
  Fiji 6 January 2011 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 6 January 2011[199]
  New Zealand
  • Ethiopia is accredited to New Zealand from its embassy in Canberra, Australia.
  • New Zealand has an embassy in Addis Ababa.
  Solomon Islands 22 December 2011 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 22 December 2011[200]

Ministry of Foreign Affairs Edit

Foreign relations are upheld by Ministry of Foreign Affairs with the ability and capacity to marshal strategic partners for the continent and the region; to play a central role in Ethiopia's growth into a democratic developmental state and in the achievement of peace and stability in the Horn of Africa.

United Nations Edit

Ethiopia was admitted to the League of Nations on 28 September 1923, becoming one of few African countries to do so due to not colonized by European powers during the 19th century Scramble for Africa. The League envisaged the membership for Ethiopia's "collective security" and protection against external attacks. The League however was unable to maintain Ethiopia's sovereignty as Japan invaded Manchuria, which Italy invaded Ethiopia in 1936.[201]

After its resumption of independence after World War II, Ethiopia was one of the founding members of the United Nations. Since the 1950s, Ethiopia has keeping UN peacekeeping missions toward Korean War and Congo Crisis and some African states like Rwanda and Burundi in 1990s. Ethiopia has now over 80,000 peacekeeping forces that are active.[201]

The UN delivers development and humanitarian plan in Ethiopia with 28 representatives of funds and specialized agencies in the UN Country Team (UNCT). Ethiopia is non-permanent member of the UN Security Council which has close cooperation with the regional organizations the African Union and the Intergovernmental Authority on Development (IGAD).[202]

European Union Edit

Ethiopia has strong relations to the European Union while the EU funding financed by the European Development Fund (EDF) with objectives of resilience. Their relations has been defined by Cotonou Agreement article 8 to 13 with strong bilateral partners and dialogue regarding sustainable development on diverse aspect of the country.

In addition, the EU is the second largest trade partner for Ethiopia with total expenditure of 4.1 billion euro; exports representing 12% while Ethiopia exports representing 26% of worldwide exports in 2016. This has been compared to China (8%), Somalia (14%) and Kuwait (13%).[203]

African Union Edit

 
50th anniversary of African Union Summit at Africa Hall in Addis Ababa, 2013

Ethiopia is one of founding African states of the Organization of African Unity (OAU) (now the African Union) on 25 May 1963 under Emperor Haile Selassie, headquartered in Addis Ababa. At the time, the organization evolved up to 54 African states, except Morocco.[204]

The country is driving force of maintaining UN-AU peacekeeping missions, especially in the Horn of Africa region. The AU does not readily aggregate the preference of each member states. Therefore, every AU norms, institution and overlaps as consensus stated in the AU Constitution Act and its various decision and policy making, and implementation organs. As such, the AU offers for member states like Ethiopia to influence and impact on policy internally and regionally.[205][206] Today, Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa is home of major organizations such as African Union, Pan African Chamber of Commerce and Industry, United Nations Economic Commission for Africa and African Standby Force.

See also Edit

References Edit

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  2. ^ Henze 2000, p. 19.
  3. ^ Henze 2000, p. 20.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h "Foreign Relations – Addis Herald". Addis Herald. from the original on 4 April 2022. Retrieved 4 April 2022.
  5. ^ Prijac, Lukian (2015). Foreign relations with Ethiopia: human and diplomatic history (from its origins to present) (in French). LIT Verlag Münster. ISBN 978-3-643-12658-0.
  6. ^ Hespeler-Boultbee, John Jeremy (April 2011). A Story in Stones: Portugal's Influence on Culture and Architecture in the Highlands of Ethiopia 1493-1634. CCB Publishing. ISBN 978-1-926585-99-4.
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  8. ^ Beshah, pp. 13–14.
  9. ^ Beshah, p. 25.
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Further reading Edit

  • Amare Tekle, "The Determinants of the Foreign Policy of Revolutionary Ethiopia", Journal of Modern African Studies, Vol. 27, No. 3 (Sep., 1989), pp. 479–502
  • Orobola Fasehun, "Nigeria and the Ethiopia-Somalia Conflict: A Case Study of Continuity in Nigerian Foreign Policy", Africa Spectrum, 17 (1982), pp. 183–193

External links Edit

  • Abdul Mohammed, , Crisis in the Horn of Africa (Social Science Research Council website)
  • "U.S. to Test Soviet 'New Thinking': Talks on Africa," The Christian Science Monitor, 4 May 1989.

  This article incorporates public domain material from The World Factbook. CIA.

foreign, relations, ethiopia, foreign, relations, ethiopia, refers, overall, diplomatic, relationship, ethiopia, ministry, foreign, affairs, oversees, foreign, relations, diplomatic, missions, country, nations, with, which, ethiopia, diplomatic, relationsethio. The foreign relations of Ethiopia refers to overall diplomatic relationship of Ethiopia The Ministry of Foreign Affairs oversees foreign relations and diplomatic missions of the country Nations with which Ethiopia has diplomatic relationsEthiopia is one of few early African countries admitted to the League of Nations becoming a member on 28 September 1923 and was one of the founding members of the United Nations During the Scramble for Africa Ethiopia had maintained its full sovereignty over European colonial power and fought the First Italo Ethiopian War in 1895 96 However the League did not protect in accord with the envisaged collective security of the country resulted Italy s occupation of Ethiopia for 5 years 1936 1941 From 1950s Ethiopia participated to UN peacekeeping missions such as in Korean War and Congo Crisis Virtually Ethiopia maintains diplomatic relations to most countries and is non permanent member of the UN Security Council Contents 1 History 1 1 Antiquity 1 1 1 Land of Punt 1 1 2 South Arabia 1 1 3 Kingdom of Aksum 1 1 4 Egypt 1 1 5 South Arabia 1 2 Middle Ages 1 3 Early modern period 1 3 1 Gondarine period 1 3 2 Post Zemene Mesafint 1 4 Menelik II 1 5 Haile Selassie 1 6 The Derg era 1 7 Federal Democratic Republic era 2 Africa 3 Americas 4 Asia 5 Europe 6 Oceania 7 Ministry of Foreign Affairs 8 United Nations 9 European Union 10 African Union 11 See also 12 References 13 Further reading 14 External linksHistory EditAntiquity Edit Land of Punt Edit Punt 2500 BCE 980 BCE was predominantly a trading centre dominated by Ancient Egypt to Horn of Africa Trading commodities includes exports of Egypt one of the most essential was incense which was mainly used for religious rituals for embalming corpse Other were ivory spices hides and exotic animals that convey route to coast of Ethiopia thus Ethiopia has been an integral part of Punt Egyptian expedition to southeastern African region was generally commenced in the second millennium BC after stabilizing relations with kingdoms of today s Sudan the Kush Napata and Meroe 1 South Arabia Edit nbsp NASA capture of Arabic description of strait Bab el Mandeb It is known for passage for South Arabian migration Some theorists hypothesized Ancient South Arabian people migrated out of Africa to the strait Bab el Mandeb when its sea level decreased to current status When their civilization came to appear from 4th millennium BC onward Mesopotamia and the Persian Gulf adaptation of Semitic language was from end of Mediterranean though they used Canaanite alphabet developed from Syria or Palestine during second millennium BC Apparently these languages similarity compared to Hebrew and Phoenician alphabets even though lacked scholarly consensus By 500 BC it was widely spoken such as the Ge ez language 2 Writing system through inscription on stone often detailed historical rival kingdoms in the region most notability the Saba Qataban Himyar Hadhramaut Ma in and others In 1959 American archeologists collected numerous artifacts and body of inscriptions in the area belonging to primary sources The inscription not only detailed about South Arabia but also the early Ethiopian history associated with Kingdom of Aksum and its rulers 3 Kingdom of Aksum Edit nbsp Map of Eastern Hemisphere in the first century featuring trade route of Aksum with the rest powerful statesThe Kingdom of Aksum has been a great power in classic Africa once it has been referenced by Persian prophet Mani in the 3rd century and Greco Roman trading guide Periplus of the Erythraean Sea in first century Axum maintained well defined foreign relations with powerful realms in the era According to Stuart Munro Hay witness the Aksumite had several account of ambassadors that had delegation with neighboring powers Occasionally Aksumite contact with foreign powers also attested by archaeological or scarce finds 4 Egypt Edit Aksumite relations with pre Roman Egypt was ostensibly uncertain However it was considered that Aksumite contact were also existed during the fall of Ptolemaic dynasty with Cleopatra death in 30 BC Few artifacts were uncovered from Egypt such as cippus of Horus given to Bruce and illustrated by him and a few amulet figurines of blue faience 4 or cornaline 4 found at various sites of Ethiopia Other include the double uraeus perhaps brought from Meroe 4 Another discoveries are an inscription of Ptolemy III copied by Kosmas at Adulis and ankh sign engraved on one of the stelae During King Ezana s reign he expedited to the Nile after Meroe was entirely sacked After its successor Noba emerged it behaved badly to consign Aksumite ambassadors punished with military expedition An aggressive mistreatment was objected by tribes such as the Mangurto the Barya and the Khasa by asking support either regarded Aksum would an aide of Noba or possibly a suzerain Ezana s expedition also attacked Kasu the remnants of Meroitic state Nuba Kasu and Beja were integral to Ezana s kingdom Meroitic artifacts have been found in Ethiopian location Addi Galamo Atse Dera such as bronze bowls which was brought from Roman Egypt It was possibly made up of diorite thumb ring found by the BIEA expedition at Aksum and corna line amulet of Harpocrates with typical double uraeus of the Meroites 4 South Arabia Edit Saba Himyar and Hadhramawit kingdom commonly known as South Arabian states had special relations with Ethiopia Culturally linguistically and socially Aksumite civilization completely inspired by those overseas While Aksumite intervention to states generally uncertain it was viable to have a military expedition beginning in 3rd century During the period of GDRT and Adhebah reign DBH Aksumite commenced a military treaty with Saba and then with Hadhramawit in the first half of third century 4 During Adhebah period Shamir called Himyar prince Dhu Raydan sent military aid from Aksum Later Aksumite king adopted nominally king of Saba and Himyar asserting suzerainty Foreign contact also continued during the fifth and early sixth centuries between the two sides of Red Sea Byzantine scholar Procopius told the voyage of crossing Red Sea for five days and nights and that the harbor of the Homeritae from which they are accustomed to putting to sea is called Boulikas presumably somewhere near Mukha and at the end of the sail across the sea they always put in at the harbor of the Adulitae at the reign of King Kaleb 4 Arabian titles were experienced in South Arabia during Kaleb s reign after his viceroy deposed by Jewish Himyar king Yusuf Asar Yemen was no longer requisite to Aksum The event led Aksumite to decline its dominion An inscription dated to 543 AD mentioned that the new king named Abraha dealing with the restoration of great dam at Marib and mentioned embassies from various foreign countries such as Aksum Rome Persia and various Arab groups Procopius noted that Abreha was subordinated by Kaleb a period which unbeknownst to Abreha regaining the kingdom reputations and he received little damage 4 Middle Ages Edit See also Ethiopian Adal War and Prester John nbsp Preste as the Emperor of Ethiopia enthroned on a map of East Africa From an atlas by the Portuguese cartographer Diogo Homem for Queen Mary c 1555 1559 British Library Foreign relations in the Middle Ages have impacted by an interaction with Iberian countries Spain and Portugal especially the latter had considerable power on internal affairs Portuguese influence spanned from 1500 to 1672 they had an interest of spreading Jesuit order from 1556 to 1632 According to their narrative effluence the Portuguese authors underscored their involvement to Ethiopia but overturned to smoothly decay Portuguese authors works notably Francisco Alvares Miguel de Castanhoso and Pedro Paez survived to this day 5 Prester John a fabulous Christian king spurred the Portuguese to pursue Ethiopia whose kingdom they equates with Garden of Eden According to the legend he was born about 1460 and last seen in 1526 There is also speculation about his age where he lived for fifteen or twenty seven years beyond 1526 Pero da Covilha profoundly marched overland into the Ethiopian Highlands about the end of 1492 or beginning of 1493 characterized by conquest and superiority He sent an information to Lisbon a few years later that contributed Vasco da Gama mobilisation to African southern cap into the Indian Ocean The Portuguese navy almost dominated the coastline of Eastern Hemisphere 6 In the early 15th century Ethiopia sought to make diplomatic contact with European kingdoms for the first time since the Aksumite era Atse Dawit I first made contact with the Republic of Venice by requesting for religious artifacts and craftsmen A letter from Henry IV of England to the Ethiopian Emperor survives 7 In 1428 Yeshaq I sent two emissaries to Alfonso V of Aragon who sent his own emissaries that failed to complete the return trip home to Aragon 8 The first continuous relations with a European country began in 1508 with Portugal under Dawit II Lebna Dengel who had just inherited the throne from his father 9 In 1487 King John II of Portugal sent two emissaries to the Orient Pero da Covilha and Afonso de Paiva Afonso would die on this mission 10 By the end of Middle Ages the Ethiopian Empire was in a 13 year long war with neighboring Muslim states and a Portuguese expedition force was sent from Goa India to aid the Ethiopian Army due to an ongoing rivalry with the Ottoman Empire who provided logistical support to the Adal Sultanate 11 12 Early modern period Edit Gondarine period Edit See also Gondarine period Jesuits nbsp Emperor Susenyos I receives Latin Patriarch Afonso Mendes Painted in 1713Since 16th century Roman Catholicism and the Jesuits increasingly influenced on state power Besides the Oromo migrations had vital role in the northern Ethiopia Among other Jesuit Spanish Jesuit Pedro Paez had favorable relations to the Emperors of Ethiopia like Za Dengel and Susenyos I the latter promulgated that Roman Catholicism state administrative to the Empire in 1622 on behalf of Orthodox Tewahedo Church resulted in grave conflict for the years The reign of Emperor Fasilides in 1632 arranged this status by restoring Orthodox Tewahedo state leadership and expelled Jesuits from his land After founding Gondar in 1636 Ethiopia then prospered again with the beginning of Gondarine period characterized as relatively peaceful governance However few Franciscan and Capuchin friars said to be lived during the 18th century such as Franciscan Giuseppe Maria di Gerusalemme Remedius Prutky who left credible records to the city Architecture of this period was slightly influenced by the remnant Jesuits but also the presence of Arab Indians brought by the Jesuits as well as Turkish in Ottoman occupied northern area had involvement One of the example is castles in Fasil Ghebbi Post Zemene Mesafint Edit nbsp The British expeditionary force moving artillery across the Ethiopian HighlandsEmperor Tewodros II reinstated the imperial power and foreign relations His connection of Queen Victoria and other European leaders unfavorable when he sent unresponsive letter to the Queen eventually leading to brief war with the British Empire The British sent 13 000 soldiers 26 000 men for logistical support and 40 000 animals including war elephants from India during their expedition resulting in Tewodros suicide at Magdala in 1868 Not only modernized the empire but he also paved the way of coherence the succession for subsequent emperors 13 Ethiopia was briefly isolated from world power in the post Zemene Mesafint period Emperor Yohannes IV faced Egyptian invasion as they laid linkage of Suez Canal to Massawa and opening road between Addi Quala and Gundet used to penetrate the Ethiopian Empire Yohannes IV on other side was reluctant to improve the road from the Ethiopian Highland to the coast of Red Sea According to British assistant John Kirkham he preferred to keep his money hoarded up Likewise German traveller Gerhard Rohlfs asserted that he wanted to build churches rather than roads Road working on the sides was completed by Swedish missionaries at Monkulu British traveller Augustus B Wylde supposed that Abyssinians were in fear of foreign invasion where lastly commented I suppose they are right 14 Wylde noted that the first Ethiopian diaspora took place in mid 1880s who had been from Massawa to Europe adapting European trousers This was strictly outlawed by the Emperor The empire nonetheless was surged into modernization by foreign contribution numerous missionary schools were expanded by Swedish Protestants at Monkulu and the French Lazarist at Keren the later described by Wylde a very useful education with very well conducted Ethiopia had received broad European population in the 19th century Jean Baraglion of French origin who had lived for over a decade and according to Wylde he enjoyed monopoly at Adwa Despite rejoice Baraglion encountered at least two rivals a Hungarian named Andre who made an artificial limbs and a Greek who have lived to Shewa over several years 14 Menelik II Edit Ethiopia had strong diplomatic relations under Emperor Menelik II with Britain France and Italy the latter pursued hegemony to Ethiopian Empire after establishing colony in Eritrea 1882 The British and French rival with Italy due to insecurity with their respective protectorate in East Africa However both feared the process of Menelik s Expansions In 1891 the British policy makers sent a circular note to the other world powers concerning the large portion of Nile Valley belonged to Ethiopia the activities and the pretension of the Negus were practically enough in themselves to bring the British to the support of Italian policy in East Africa 15 nbsp Ethiopia in 1909 illustrated by Edward HertsletOn 2 May 1889 the Treaty of Wuchale was signed between Ethiopia and Italy with respective bilingual version The treaty was signed after the Italian occupation of Eritrea and aimed to create friendship with both countries The Amharic and Italian language however confused by Article 17 in which Menelik denounced in 1893 resulting Italy s threatening over the status of newly formed boundary nbsp Menelik II at the Battle of AdwaIn 1895 the First Italo Ethiopian War began ending with Italy s defeat at Battle of Adwa by Ethiopian troops who were assisted logistically by Menelik By early 1900 European agencies opened legation in Addis Ababa and had huge impact on investment in the country s infrastructure schools banks road railway etc Haile Selassie Edit During Haile Selassie coronation in 1930 emissaries from the United States Egypt Turkey Sweden Belgium and Japan were also presented Since then he led the forefront diplomatic relations of Ethiopia with world powers 16 nbsp Italian artillery during the Second Italo Ethiopian War March 1936In 1930s Ethiopia faced Italian renewed imperialist design Together with the failure of the League of Nations envision of Ethiopia s collective security Italy invaded Ethiopia again in October 1935 culminating in the Second Italo Ethiopian War In May 1936 Mussolini declared Ethiopia as part of Italian East Africa by merging with Eritrea and Somaliland Haile Selassie fled to England s Fairfield House Bath and delivered an address that made him a worldwide figure and the 1935 Time Man of the Year On 10 June 1940 Mussolini declared war on France and Britain and attacked British and Commonwealth forces in Egypt Sudan Kenya and British Somaliland In January 1941 the British army together with Arbegnoch the Patriots and Gideon Force occupied Ethiopia On 5 May Haile Selassie with auspice of Ethiopian Free Forces entered Addis Ababa and reclaimed his throne while the war continued until November After their defeat the Italian began guerrilla offensive in Ethiopia that lasted until the Armistice between Italy and Allied armed forces in September 1943 nbsp Captain Elliot M Senn USN escorts Emperor Haile Selassie aboard the U S 13 February 1945 On 31 January 1942 the British and Ethiopia signed Anglo Ethiopian Agreement which Britain recognized Ethiopian sovereignty except military occupation of Ogaden with their colony in Somaliland and the former Italian colony of Somaliland creating a single polity Ethiopians discontent about the privilege of military administration of some south eastern region until formal agreement signed on 19 December 1944 that ended British advantage in the Ethiopian regions The Italian Republic signed peace treaty on 10 February 1947 that recognized Ethiopia s sovereignty with agreement to pay 25 000 000 in reparations 17 In 1952 Eritrea federated with Ethiopia with majority vote in the United Nations and this attitude declined by 1961 culminating in the Eritrean War of Independence since armed forces formed such as the Eritrean Liberation Front ELF nbsp Eritrean War of Independence map in 1970sOppositions against Haile Selassie came to existence with students began marching through 1960s and early 1970s chanting land for tiller and embracing several Marxist Leninist theme 18 Haile Selassie deposed on 12 September 1974 by officers of Ethiopian Army led by Aman Andom named Coordinating Committee of the Armed Forces Police and Territorial Army The committee renamed itself Provisional Military Administrative Council known as the Derg after abolishing the Ethiopian Empire in March 1975 The Derg era Edit The Derg aligned itself with Soviet bloc had similar Marxist Leninist policy on Ethiopia The Derg suffered from internal insurgency and ambivalent relations with neighboring countries such as Eritrea and Somalia In 1977 the Ogaden War was fought between the Derg supported by Cuba Soviet Union and South Yemen and Somalia with the United States and Egypt Although ending on 15 March 1978 the relations between Ethiopia and Somalia marred with political dispute with involvement of the Ogaden National Liberation Front ONLF in relations of the disputed Ogaden region nbsp Mengistu Haile Mariam fifth in row at SED Party Congress in Berlin April 1986By the 1990 the Derg and Soviet Union relations was deteriorated after Mengistu Haile Mariam banned the Ethiopian media to use the term glasnost and perestroika defying Mikhail Gorbachev who was believed has not fondness for him By early 1990 Mengistu helped emigration of the Ethiopian Jews to Israel by which many Jewish organizations and US Congress discerned Mengistu s task in the lobbying effort 19 Federal Democratic Republic era Edit nbsp Prime Minister Meles Zenawi with Russian President Vladimir Putin on 3 December 2001 nbsp Former US Secretary of State John Kerry with Hailemariam Desalegn in 2014 nbsp Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed with Eritrean president Isaias Afwerki meeting on 3 March 2019After defeating the Derg in 1991 the newly formed coalition the Ethiopian People s Revolutionary Democratic Front EPRDF led by President and later Prime Minister Meles Zenawi experienced opposition from factions in Somalia as well as within the country in May 1991 a pan Islamist Al Itihaad al Islamiya Islamic Unity established to consolidate Somalia s power in the Greater Somalia Relations with Eritrea was somewhat better intensified after its UN sponsored session from Ethiopia in May 1993 Later in 1998 their relations was deteriorated after large scale Eritrean mechanized force penetrated to Badme region triggering the Eritrean Ethiopian War Both countries spent favorable amount of armaments ahead of the war and suffered reportedly 100 000 casualties combined as a direct consequence thereof excluding indeterminate number of refugees 20 21 22 23 In December 2000 the two countries government signed Algiers Agreement which finalized the war and created binding judicial commissions the Eritrea Ethiopia Border Commission and the Eritrean Ethiopian Claims Commissions to oversee the disputed border and related claims Since then there was elevated tensions with border conflict and stalemate what is described war footing and no war no peace with absence of foreign and domestic policy domination This was ended after Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed came to power in 2018 signed the 2018 Eritrea Ethiopia summit on 8 9 July 24 Meles government relations with Djibouti was friendly as Djibouti accessed Port of Djibouti to Ethiopia Ethiopia had 90 imports arrived from Port of Djibouti and 95 of Djiboutian regional exports 25 In 2006 the Islamic Courts Union ICU virtually controlled the whole of southern Somalia and successfully united Mogadishu and imposed Shari a law With support of the Transitional Federal Government of Somalia Ethiopia under UN peacekeeping mission against War on Terrorism attacked ICU The ICU s split eventually led to the formation of Al Shabaab regrouping to continue the insurgency against TFG and Ethiopian military presence in Somalia 26 In May 2010 the Nile Basin Initiative was signed by five upstream countries such as Ethiopia Tanzania Uganda Kenya and Rwanda and Burundi as Egypt considerate as breach to the 1929 Anglo Egyptian treaty that gave its right to share water 27 On 2 April 2011 the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam GERD inaugurated construction expected producing 15 000 megawatts of power within 10 years spending 12 billion dollars of strategy to improve power generating capabilities Egypt and Sudan continued objecting the filling of the dam in 2020 28 29 Under Abiy Ahmed premiership since 2018 Ethiopia repleted its relations Somalia and Eritrea In October 2018 Ethiopia signed peace agreement with the rebel faction ONLF ending 34 year long conflict since 1984 ONLF has clashed with the Ethiopian troops to contain vast oil and gas deposits where Chinese oil firms developing two gas field in the area In 2007 ONLF launched deadly attack against Chinese run oil field which killed 65 Ethiopians and 9 Chinese nationals 30 During the Tigray War Ethiopia was allied to countries such as Turkey 31 United Arab Emirates 32 and Iran 31 who supplied drones to the Ethiopian government 13 With involvement of Eritrean Defence Forces EDF the US President Joe Biden designated six targets of sanction per Executive Order 14046 which was signed in September 2021 33 Africa EditCountry Formal Relations Began Notes nbsp Algeria Algeria has an embassy in Addis Ababa Ethiopia closed its embassy in Algiers in 2021 nbsp Angola 13 July 1977 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 13 July 1977 34 nbsp Benin 7 May 1966 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 7 May 1966 when first Ambassador of Ethiopia to Dahomey resident in Lagos Mr Dawit Abdou presented his credentials 35 nbsp Burkina Faso 11 April 1968 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 11 April 1968 when the first Ethiopian ambassador to Upper Volta Ato Haile Mechecha has presented his credentials to President Lamizana 36 nbsp Burundi 9 June 1965 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 9 June 1965 when the Burundi government has appointed its Ambassador in Addis Ababa Pascar Bugiriza 37 nbsp Central African Republic 15 September 1970 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 15 September 1970 38 nbsp Chad 21 October 1969 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 21 October 1969 when the first Ambassador of Chad to Ethiopia M Abdurahman Musa presented his credentials to Emperor Haile Selassie 39 nbsp Cote d Ivoire 4 March 1966 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 4 March 1966 when first Ambassador of Ethiopia in Cote d Ivoire presented his credentials 40 Cote d Ivoire has an embassy in Addis Ababa Ethiopia has an embassy in Abidjan nbsp Djibouti See Djibouti Ethiopia relations Diplomatic relations between Ethiopia and Djibouti were established in 1984 41 The border between the two countries is based on the Franco Ethiopian convention of 20 March 1897 which was later finalized in a protocol dated 16 January 1954 and rendered effective on 28 February of that year 42 In October 1991 the Ethiopian and Djiboutian governments signed a Treaty of Friendship and Cooperation further solidifying relations Since 1991 the two countries have signed over 39 protocol agreements 41 Djibouti remains a major economic partner of Ethiopia On 13 April 2002 the two countries signed an agreement concerning the use of the Port of Djibouti and the transit of cargo which was later ratified by the Ethiopian Federal Parliamentary Assembly on 4 June of the same year 43 About 70 of the Port of Djibouti s activity consists of imports to and exports from neighboring Ethiopia which depends on the harbour as its main maritime outlet The port also serves as an international refueling center and transshipment hub 44 Additionally both countries share ownership of the Addis Ababa Djibouti Railroad nbsp Egypt See Egypt Ethiopia relations As two of the oldest independent states in Africa both countries have an ancient relationship in many forms The Ethiopian Orthodox Tewahedo Church was under the administration of the Coptic Orthodox Church from ancient times until 1959 Ethiopian and Egyptian armies clashed in the early 19th century over control of territory in what is modern Sudan and Ethiopia s access to the Red Sea Both countries established formal diplomatic ties in 1927 45 More recently because both countries share a special relationship over the Nile basin both are members of the Nile Basin Initiative In 2010s both countries relationship was deteriorated as a result of Ethiopia failed to reach trilateral agreement with Sudan regarding the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam project advanced In 2021 Ethiopia closed its embassy in Cairo due to financial reasons 46 nbsp Eritrea 22 May 1993 See Eritrea Ethiopia relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 22 May 1993 when first Ambassador of the Transitional Government of Ethiopia s to Eritrea Mr Awalom Woldu Tuku presented his credentials to President Issaias Afwerki 47 Diplomatic relations were broken on 12 May 1998 when Ethiopia and Eritrea went to war over the disputed border area of Badme 48 Diplomatic relations were restored on 8 July 2018 49 The boundary between these two countries is based on three treaties between Ethiopia and Italy in 1900 1902 and 1908 However no part of the shared boundary was afterwards demarcated 50 From 1950 until 1993 Eritrea was federated as part of Ethiopia During much of this period a number of Eritreans fought for independence from Ethiopia The federation was ended with an April 1993 plebiscite which approved Eritrea s full independence Disputes over Eritrea s border alignment led to the Eritrean Ethiopian War 1998 2000 which was resolved by an independent boundary commission s delimitation decision in 2002 However demarcation has been delayed despite intense international intervention by Ethiopian insistence that the decision ignored human geography made technical errors in the delimitation and determined that certain disputed areas specifically Badme fall to Eritrea Eritrea meanwhile insists on not deviating from the commission s decision The peacekeepers monitoring the disputed boundary were forced to withdraw in July 2008 51 having considered their remaining options 52 after experiencing serious difficulties in supporting its troops 53 In July 2018 leaders both countries signed a peace treaty to put a formal end to a state of war between both nations paving the way for greater economic cooperation and improved ties between them 54 nbsp Eswatini 1 January 1971 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 1 January 1971 when the first Swaziland Ambassador to Ethiopia Mr Martin Ndiniso has presented his credentials to Emperor Haile Selassie 55 nbsp Gambia 17 October 1966 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 17 October 1966 56 nbsp Ghana Ethiopia has an embassy in Accra Ghana has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Guinea 22 June 1962 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 22 June 1962 when Guinea Ambassador to United Arab Republic Egypt Mr Seydou Diallo was received by Emperor Haile Selassie as Ambassador also to Ethiopia 57 nbsp Kenya 26 June 1964 See Ethiopia Kenya relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 26 June 1964 and opened Ethiopian Embassy in Nairobi 58 59 Relations between Kenya and Ethiopia date back to the 1954 when the Ethiopian authorities under Haile Selassie I established an honorary consulate general in the British Kenya Colony In 1961 prior to Kenya s independence Ethiopia appointed its first ambassador to Kenya and six years later Kenya opened an embassy in Addis Ababa 60 The border between the two countries is based on a treaty signed by Ethiopia and Kenya on 9 June 1970 which determines the present day boundary abrogating all previous boundary treaties This border has been subjected to demarcation 61 nbsp Malawi 30 June 1964 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 30 June 1964 when the first Malawi Ambassador to Ethiopia Mr Katenga arrived in Addis Ababa 62 nbsp Mali 23 March 1964 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 23 March 1964 when first Ambassador of the Republic of Mali Mr Modibo Diallo has presented his credentials to Emperor Haile Selassie 63 nbsp Mauritania 21 September 1966 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 21 September 1966 64 nbsp Morocco Ethiopia has an embassy in Rabat Morocco has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Namibia Ethiopia Namibia relations refers to the current and historical relationship between Ethiopia and Namibia During the South African occupation of Namibia Ethiopia was one of the country s leading proponents abroad Ethiopia and Liberia were the first two states to bring the question of independence for then South West Africa to the United Nations 65 Namibia gained independence in 1990 In 2007 the two governments signed an agreement which expanded air travel between the two states 66 In December 2009 Namibia s Foreign Minister Marko Hausiku met with Ethiopian Foreign Affairs Minister Seyoum Mesfin and noted the economic science technical and cultural agreements in place between the two countries and expressed a desire to improve the trade relations 67 Ethiopia is accredited to Namibia from its embassy in Pretoria South Africa Namibia has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Niger 6 October 1965 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 6 October 1965 when first Ambassador of Ethiopia to Niger resident in Lagos Mr Dawit Abdou presented his credentials 68 nbsp Nigeria Main article Ethiopia Nigeria relations Ethiopia has an embassy in Abuja Nigeria has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Rwanda 26 October 1966 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 26 October 1966 69 nbsp Senegal Ethiopia has an embassy in Dakar Senegal has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Seychelles 14 April 1982 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 14 April 1982 70 nbsp Sierra Leone 26 March 1968 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 26 March 1968 71 nbsp Somalia See Ethiopia Somalia relations Relations between the peoples of Somalia and Ethiopia stretch back to antiquity to a common origin The Ethiopian region is one of the proposed homelands of the Horn of Africa s various Afro Asiatic communities 72 During the Middle Ages Somali Imam Ahmad ibn Ibrihim al Ghazi Ahmad Gurey or Gragn led a Conquest of Abyssinia Futuh al Habash which brought three quarters of the Christian Ethiopian Empire under the power of the Muslim Adal Sultanate 73 74 With an army mainly composed of Somalis 75 Many historians trace the origins of tensions between Somalia and Ethiopia to this war 76 In the 1960s and 1970s a territorial dispute over the Ogaden region led to various armed confrontations between the Somalian and Ethiopian militaries The tensions culminated in the Ogaden War which saw the Somali army capture most of the disputed territory by September 1977 before finally being expelled by a coalition of communist forces With changes in leadership in the early 1990s brought on by the start of the Somali Civil War and Ethiopian Civil War respectively relations between the Somali and Ethiopian authorities entered a new phase of military cooperation against the Islamic Courts Union ICU rebel group and its more radical successor Al Shabaab In October 2011 a coordinated multinational operation began against Al Shabaab in southern Somalia the Ethiopian military eventually joined the Transitional Federal Government led mission the following month 77 The Federal Government of Somalia was later established on 20 August 2012 78 representing the first permanent central government in the country since the start of the civil war 78 The following month Hassan Sheikh Mohamud was elected as the new Somali government s first President with the Ethiopian authorities welcoming his selection and newly appointed Prime Minister of Ethiopia Hailemariam Desalegn attending Mohamud s inauguration ceremony 79 nbsp South Africa 6 January 1995 See Ethiopia South Africa relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 6 January 1995 80 Ethiopia has an embassy in Pretoria South Africa has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Sudan 27 June 1956 See Ethiopia Sudan relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 27 June 1956 when accredited first Ambassador of Ethiopia to Sudan Mr Ato Mellas M Andom 81 Alodia and the Kingdom of Makuria had some relations with Ethiopia in Medieval times The Ethiopian Empire fought against Mahdist Sudan in the Mahdist War Ethiopia and Sudan first established formal relations in 1956 82 Relations between Ethiopia and Sudan were very good following the end of the Ethiopian Civil War due to the support that the Sudanese government had given to the Ethiopian People s Revolutionary Democratic Front However relations were strained for a time following the 26 June 1995 assassination attempt against Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak as he was leaving the OAU summit meeting in Addis Ababa The subsequent investigation revealed that Sudan was involved in this act forcing the Ethiopian government to take a series of steps against Sudan that September which included closing the Sudanese consulate in Gambela reducing the number of Sudanese embassy staff and terminating all Sudan Airways and Ethiopian Airlines flights between the two countries However the start of the Eritrean Ethiopian War led to Sudan and Ethiopia put this conflict between them and normalizing their relations by November 1999 when president Omar Hassan al Bashir made a formal visit to Addis Ababa 83 A protocol concerning Ethiopian access to Port Sudan was signed between the two countries 5 March 2000 in Khartoum and this protocol and its subsequent amendment were ratified by the Ethiopian Federal Parliamentary Assembly on 3 July 2003 84 Efforts to demarcate the porous boundary with Sudan were delayed by the Second Sudanese Civil War In May 2008 residents along the western Ethiopian border reportedly discovered that the government had agreed to demarcate this boundary when Sudanese soldiers forced them out of their homes It was reported that as many as 2 000 people were displaced in the Gambela Region and the Sudanese army reportedly set fire to two dozen Ethiopian farms and imprisoned 34 people in the Amhara Region However Prime Minister Meles Zenawi publicly denied that any Ethiopians had been displaced by this agreement 85 Negotiations over this boundary continues with the twelfth meeting of the Boundary Commission announced 28 December 2009 at Mek ele with Ethiopian representatives from the Tigray Benishangul Gumuz Amhara and Gambela Regions and from the Sudanese side representatives of the Upper Nile Blue Nile Sennar and Al Qadarif Administrations 86 Despite these border tensions Sudan remains a major economic partner of Ethiopia According to the Ethiopian Petroleum Supplier Enterprise EPSE Ethiopia in April 2013 imported around 1 12 billion worth of oil from Sudan over the previous six months In total about 85 of Ethiopia s yearly oil consumption comes from Sudan via the Port of Djibouti Ethiopia and Sudan are also in the process of linking their power grids 87 In 2010s Sudan Egypt Ethiopia joint relations was deteriorated as a result of Ethiopia failed to reach trilateral agreement regarding the Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam project advanced During Tigray War in 2020 there was undissolved clash between their border furtherly aggravated their relation 88 nbsp Tanzania 1 June 1964 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 1 June 1964 when Ethiopia s Ambassador Ato Mekasha presents his credentials 89 Ethiopia has an embassy in Dar es Salaam Tanzania has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Togo 11 December 1982 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 11 December 1982 when Ambassador of Ethiopia resident in Accra Mr Kasate Berham Babina presented letters of credence to President of Togo Gnassingbe Eyadema 90 nbsp Tunisia 31 July 1962 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 31 July 1962 91 nbsp Uganda 4 June 1964 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 4 June 1964 when accredited first Ambassador of Ethiopia to Uganda resident in Nairobi Mr Ato Getachew Mekasha 92 Ethiopia has an embassy in Kampala Uganda has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Zambia 8 July 1965 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 8 July 1965 when Chief Mapanza has been appointed the Zambian Ambassador to Ethiopia 93 nbsp Zimbabwe Ethiopia has an embassy in Harare Zimbabwe has an embassy in Addis Ababa Americas EditCountry Formal Relations Began Notes nbsp Argentina 28 March 1968 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 28 March 1968 94 Argentina has an embassy in Addis Ababa Ethiopia is accredited to Argentina from its embassy in Brasilia Brazil nbsp Bolivia 8 December 1987 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 8 December 1987 95 nbsp Brazil 9 January 1951 See Brazil Ethiopia relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 9 January 1951 when was accredited first Minister of Ethiopia to Brazil Mr Blatta Dawit Ogbazgy 96 Brazil has an embassy in Addis Ababa Ethiopia has an embassy in Brasilia nbsp Canada 13 October 1965 See Canada Ethiopia relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 13 October 1965 97 Canada has an embassy in Addis Ababa 98 Ethiopia closed its embassy in Ottawa in 2021 See also Ethiopian Canadian nbsp Chile 16 October 1945 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 16 October 1945 99 Chile has an embassy in Addis Ababa Ethiopia does not have an accreditation to Chile nbsp Colombia 30 May 1967 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 30 May 1967 100 nbsp Cuba 18 July 1975 See Cuba Ethiopia relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 18 July 1975 101 Cuba has an embassy in Addis Ababa Ethiopia has an embassy in Havana nbsp Ecuador 23 January 2012 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 23 January 2012 102 Ecuador is accredited to Ethiopia from its embassy in Cairo Egypt Ethiopia does not have an accreditation to Ecuador nbsp Grenada 17 September 1979 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 17 September 1979 103 nbsp Guatemala 20 June 2012 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 20 June 2012 104 nbsp Guyana 13 October 1970 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 13 October 1970 105 nbsp Jamaica 22 March 1966 See Jamaica Ethiopia relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 22 March 1966 106 Jamaica has an embassy in Addis Ababa Ethiopia has an embassy in Kingston nbsp Mexico 1 November 1949 See Ethiopia Mexico relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 1 November 1949 107 During the Second Italo Ethiopian War Mexico was one of the member states of the League of Nations to condemn the occupation of Ethiopia and support the League s sanctions against Italy 108 Since then relations between the two nations have strengthened In Addis Ababa Ethiopia named a square in the capital Mexico Square Mexico in turn named a metro station in Mexico City called Metro Etiopia Mexico has an embassy in Addis Ababa 109 Ethiopia is accredited to Mexico from its embassy in Washington D C United States 110 nbsp Nicaragua 7 May 1984 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 7 May 1984 111 nbsp Panama 17 August 1967 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 17 August 1967 112 nbsp Peru 10 September 1967 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 10 September 1967 113 nbsp Saint Kitts and Nevis 1 March 2017 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 1 March 2017 114 nbsp Saint Lucia 3 August 2004 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 3 August 2004 115 nbsp Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 16 February 2004 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 16 February 2004 116 nbsp Trinidad and Tobago 7 July 1965 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 7 July 1965 when was appointed first Ambassador of Trinidad and Tobago to Ethiopia Mr George Daniel 117 nbsp United States 27 December 1903 See Ethiopia United States relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 27 December 1903 118 Ethiopia is a strategic partner of the United States in the Global War on Terrorism U S development assistance to Ethiopia is focused on reducing famine vulnerability hunger and poverty and emphasizes economic governance and social sector policy reforms Ethiopia has an embassy in Washington D C and a consulate general in Los Angeles 110 United States has an embassy in Addis Ababa 119 See also Ethiopian American nbsp Uruguay 23 March 2011 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 23 March 2011 120 Ethiopia does not have an accreditation to Uruguay Uruguay has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Venezuela 20 July 1950 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 20 July 1950 121 Ethiopia does not have an accreditation to Venezuela Venezuela has an embassy in Addis Ababa Asia EditCountry Formal Relations Began Notes nbsp Armenia 2 December 1993 See Armenia Ethiopia relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 2 December 1993 122 Armenia has an embassy in Addis Ababa 123 Ethiopia is accredited to Armenia from its embassy in Moscow Russia 124 Both nations have among the oldest Christian communities nbsp Azerbaijan 2 November 1992 See Azerbaijan Ethiopia relations On November 2 1992 Azerbaijan and Ethiopia signed a Protocol on the establishment of diplomatic relations 125 Azerbaijan has an embassy in Addis Ababa 125 Ethiopia maintains an honorary consulate in Baku Azerbaijan 126 nbsp Bahrain 28 November 1999 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 28 November 1999 127 nbsp Bangladesh 19 September 1976 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 19 September 1976 when Mr Mohammad Sultan Bangladesh Ambassador to Egypt has been accredited concurrently to Ethiopia 128 nbsp China 24 November 1970 See China Ethiopia relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 24 November 1970 129 China has an embassy in Addis Ababa Ethiopia has an embassy in Beijing and consulates general in Chongqing Guangzhou and Shanghai nbsp Georgia 29 June 1993 See Ethiopia Georgia relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 29 June 1993 130 nbsp India 1 July 1948 See Ethiopia India relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 1 July 1948 131 Ethiopia has an embassy in New Delhi India has an embassy in Addis Ababa India trains Ethiopian personnel under its ITEC program and is Ethiopia s second largest source of Foreign Direct Investments The Second India Africa Forum Summit was held in Addis Ababa in 2011 and India launched its Pan African e Network Project in Ethiopia in 2007 nbsp Indonesia See Ethiopia Indonesia relations Ethiopia has an embassy in Jakarta Indonesia has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Iraq 14 September 1949 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 14 September 1949 132 nbsp Israel 24 October 1961 See Ethiopia Israel relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 24 October 1961 when Ethiopia recognized Israel de jure and agreed to raise the consulate in Addis Ababa to the level of an embassy 133 Ethiopia severance diplomatic relations with Israel on 23 October 1973 134 Diplomatic relations were resumed on 3 November 1989 135 Ethiopia has an embassy in Tel Aviv 136 Israel has an embassy in Addis Ababa 137 See also Ethiopian Jews in Israel Operation Moses Operation Solomon History of the Jews in Ethiopia Ethiopian Ministry of Foreign Affairs about relations with Israel nbsp Japan 1930 See Ethiopia Japan relations Japan and Ethiopia explored diplomatic and economic relations in the 1930s in response to perceived common interests however these contacts lapsed with the commencement of the Second Italo Ethiopian War Relations were reestablished in 1955 and ambassadors exchanged in 1958 138 nbsp Jordan 16 May 1960 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 16 May 1960 139 nbsp Kazakhstan 5 September 2011 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 5 September 2011 140 nbsp Kuwait 9 October 1966 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 9 October 1966 141 nbsp Laos 9 December 2005 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 9 December 2005 142 nbsp Lebanon 31 July 1949 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 31 July 1949 when was accredited first Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of Ethiopia to Lebanon Mr Fitaorari Tafesse Habte Mikael 143 nbsp Malaysia See Ethiopia Malaysia relations Ethiopia has a consulate general in Kuala Lumpur 144 while Malaysia doesn t have any embassy in Ethiopia Malaysia is one of the major trade partner and also one of the largest investors in Ethiopia 145 146 147 nbsp Maldives 6 August 2018 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 6 August 2018 148 nbsp Nepal 15 April 1971 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 15 April 1971 149 nbsp North Korea 1975 Both countries established diplomatic relations in 1975 150 nbsp Oman 7 February 1995 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 7 February 1995 151 nbsp Pakistan 28 December 1957 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 28 December 1957 152 Ethiopia has an embassy in Islamabad Pakistan has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Palestine 1989 Palestine has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Philippines 7 February 1977 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 7 February 1977 153 The Philippines and Ethiopia signed their first air agreement in 2014 154 nbsp Qatar 16 July 1995 See Ethiopia Qatar relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 16 July 1995 155 Ethiopia abruptly broke diplomatic ties with Qatar in April 2008 apparently due to statements made by the Al Jazeera news channel which is based in Qatar nbsp Saudi Arabia 25 May 1949 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 25 May 1949 when Minister of Ethiopia to Saudi Arabia Resident in Cairo Mr Taffassa Hapte Mikael presented his credentials 156 nbsp South Korea 23 December 1963 Between The Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia and The Republic of Korea were established diplomatic relations on 23 December 1963 157 Infantry men of 6 037 from Ethiopia have participated in the Korean War to help South Korea The number of South Koreans living in Ethiopia in 2016 were about 460 The Republic of Korea s official development assistance from 1991 to 2014 was about 88 61m USD The Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia has an embassy in Seoul 158 Since 1965 South Korea has an embassy in Addis Ababa 159 nbsp Syria 26 August 1980 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 26 August 1980 160 nbsp Turkey 1896 161 See also Ethiopia Turkey relations Ethiopia has an embassy in Ankara 161 Turkey has an embassy in Addis Ababa 161 Trade volume between the two countries was US 398 8 million in 2019 Ethiopian exports imports 27 5 378 3 USD 161 nbsp United Arab Emirates 5 May 1993 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 5 May 1993 162 Europe EditCountry Date Notes nbsp Austria 23 July 1948 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 23 July 1948 163 nbsp Belarus 18 May 1994 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 18 May 1994 164 Belarus is accredited to Ethiopia from its embassy in Nairobi Kenya Ethiopia is accredited to Belarus from its embassy in Moscow Russia nbsp Belgium 25 March 1923 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 25 March 1923 when Consulate General of Belgium transformed into a Legation and the first Minister Plenipotentiary is Maxime Gerard 165 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina 12 February 2007 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 12 February 2007 166 nbsp Bulgaria 3 July 1956 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 3 July 1956 167 nbsp Cyprus See Cyprus Ethiopia relations nbsp Czech Republic 11 February 1944 Czechoslovakia and Ethiopia established diplomatic relations on 11 February 1944 The Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia FDRE recognized the new Czech Republic as on January 1 1993 and established diplomatic relations accordingly 168 Ethiopia is accredited to the Czech Republic from its embassy in Berlin Germany Czech Republic has an embassy in Addis Ababa 169 nbsp Denmark 21 February 1950 See Denmark Ethiopia relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 21 February 1950 when first Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary of Denmark to Ethiopia resident of Athens Mr Hubert Wichfeld presented his credentials 170 20 January 1967 both countries was raised their diplomatic missions to Embassy level 171 Denmark has an embassy in Addis Ababa Ethiopia is accredited to Denmark from its embassy in Stockholm Sweden nbsp Estonia 23 August 2005 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 23 August 2005 172 nbsp Finland 17 July 1959 See Ethiopia Finland relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 17 July 1959 173 Ethiopia is represented in Finland through its embassy in Stockholm Sweden Finland has an embassy in Addis Ababa 174 nbsp France 20 March 1897 See Ethiopia France relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 20 March 1897 175 Ethiopia has an embassy in Paris France has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Germany 7 March 1905 See Ethiopia Germany relations Both countries established diplomatic relations when signed a treaty of friendship on 7 March 1905 176 a German Legation was opened in Addis Ababa in 1907 and an Ethiopian embassy in Berlin the same year Germany supported Ethiopia in the Second Italo Abyssinian War citation needed Ethiopia has an embassy in Berlin Germany has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Greece See Ethiopia Greece relations Ethiopia is accredited to Greece from its embassy in Rome Italy Greece has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Hungary 17 November 1959 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 17 November 1959 177 nbsp Iceland 20 May 1968 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 20 May 1968 178 nbsp Ireland 1994 See Ethiopia Ireland relations Ethiopia closed its embassy in Dublin in 2021 Since 1994 Ireland has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Italy 1889 See Ethiopia Italy relations Italy was one of the first European countries to open diplomatic relations with Ethiopia Both countries have fought two wars against each other the First Italo Ethiopian War and the Second Italo Ethiopian War Total trade volume between two countries reached 455 928 352 26 Birr in 2011 179 Italy has an embassy in Addis Ababa 180 Ethiopia has an embassy in Rome 181 nbsp Latvia 11 March 2008 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 11 March 2008 182 nbsp Lithuania 19 October 1998 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 19 October 1998 183 nbsp Luxembourg 19 March 1980 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 19 March 1980 when accredited first Ambassador of Ethiopia to Luxembourg resident in Brussels Dr Ghebray Berhane 184 nbsp Malta 30 November 1982 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 30 November 1982 185 nbsp Montenegro 10 June 2011 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 10 June 2011 186 nbsp North Macedonia 17 July 2000 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 17 July 2000 187 nbsp Poland 14 July 1945 See Ethiopia Poland relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 14 July 1945 188 Ethiopia is accredited to Poland from its embassy in Berlin Germany Poland has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Portugal 4 July 1984 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 4 July 1984 189 nbsp Romania 2 July 1957 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 2 July 1957 190 Ethiopia is accredited to Romania from its Permanent Mission in Geneva Switzerland Romania has an embassy in Addis Ababa 191 Ethiopian Ministry of Foreign Affairs about bilateral relations with Romania nbsp Russia 1943 4 21 See Ethiopia Russia relations Russia has an embassy in Addis Ababa Ethiopia has an embassy in Moscow The Ethiopian ambassador to Russia is also accredited to Armenia Azerbaijan Belarus Georgia Kazakhstan Kyrgyzstan Moldova Tajikistan Turkmenistan Ukraine and Uzbekistan The history of this relationship has its origins in the 19th century Russia supplied the mountain guns the Ethiopian army used in the Battle of Adwa More recently the Soviet Union was a major source of military and economic aid under the Derg and during the People s Democratic Republic of Ethiopia See also Alexander Bulatovich Relations are somewhat unsure owing to Russia s close ties with Ethiopia s neighboring rival Sudan nbsp Serbia 4 March 1952 See Ethiopia Serbia relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 4 March 1952 192 Serbia has an embassy in Addis Ababa Ethiopia is accredited Serbia from its embassy in Rome Italy Ethiopia is a strong advocate for Serbia on the issue of Kosovo The first vessel in the Ethiopian Navy was a gift from Yugoslavia The Serbian embassy is the former villa of Yugoslav President Josip Broz Tito which was given as a gift by Haile Selassie On 27 January 2012 after traveling to Addis Ababa in order to reaffirm Ethiopia s stance on Kosovo regarding Serbia Vuk Jeremic and Haile Mariam signed a memorandum of understanding between the two nations ministries of foreign affairs 193 nbsp Slovakia 10 May 1995 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 10 May 1995 194 nbsp Spain 27 April 1951 See Ethiopia Spain relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 27 April 1951 195 Ethiopia is accredited to Spain from its embassy in Paris Spain has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Sweden See Ethiopia Sweden relations Ethiopia has an embassy in Stockholm Sweden has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Ukraine 1 April 1993 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 1 April 1993 196 Ethiopia is accredited to Ukraine from its embassy in Moscow Ukraine has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp United Kingdom 3 December 1903 See Ethiopia United Kingdom relations Both countries established diplomatic relations on 3 December 1903 when appointed first Minister Plenipotentiary of United Kingdom to the Abyssinia Sir John Lane Harrington 197 Ethiopia has an embassy in London United Kingdom has an embassy in Addis Ababa During the Second World War in 1941 the British army liberated Ethiopia from the Italian occupation 1936 1941 Oceania EditCountry Formal Relations Began Notes nbsp Australia 13 December 1965 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 13 December 1965 when accredited first Ambassador of Australia to Ethiopia Mr W R Crocker 198 Australia has an embassy in Addis Ababa Ethiopia has an embassy in Canberra nbsp Fiji 6 January 2011 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 6 January 2011 199 nbsp New Zealand Ethiopia is accredited to New Zealand from its embassy in Canberra Australia New Zealand has an embassy in Addis Ababa nbsp Solomon Islands 22 December 2011 Both countries established diplomatic relations on 22 December 2011 200 Ministry of Foreign Affairs EditForeign relations are upheld by Ministry of Foreign Affairs with the ability and capacity to marshal strategic partners for the continent and the region to play a central role in Ethiopia s growth into a democratic developmental state and in the achievement of peace and stability in the Horn of Africa United Nations EditMain article Ethiopia and the United Nations Ethiopia was admitted to the League of Nations on 28 September 1923 becoming one of few African countries to do so due to not colonized by European powers during the 19th century Scramble for Africa The League envisaged the membership for Ethiopia s collective security and protection against external attacks The League however was unable to maintain Ethiopia s sovereignty as Japan invaded Manchuria which Italy invaded Ethiopia in 1936 201 After its resumption of independence after World War II Ethiopia was one of the founding members of the United Nations Since the 1950s Ethiopia has keeping UN peacekeeping missions toward Korean War and Congo Crisis and some African states like Rwanda and Burundi in 1990s Ethiopia has now over 80 000 peacekeeping forces that are active 201 The UN delivers development and humanitarian plan in Ethiopia with 28 representatives of funds and specialized agencies in the UN Country Team UNCT Ethiopia is non permanent member of the UN Security Council which has close cooperation with the regional organizations the African Union and the Intergovernmental Authority on Development IGAD 202 European Union EditMain article Ethiopia European Union relations Ethiopia has strong relations to the European Union while the EU funding financed by the European Development Fund EDF with objectives of resilience Their relations has been defined by Cotonou Agreement article 8 to 13 with strong bilateral partners and dialogue regarding sustainable development on diverse aspect of the country In addition the EU is the second largest trade partner for Ethiopia with total expenditure of 4 1 billion euro exports representing 12 while Ethiopia exports representing 26 of worldwide exports in 2016 This has been compared to China 8 Somalia 14 and Kuwait 13 203 African Union EditMain article Ethiopia African Union relations nbsp 50th anniversary of African Union Summit at Africa Hall in Addis Ababa 2013Ethiopia is one of founding African states of the Organization of African Unity OAU now the African Union on 25 May 1963 under Emperor Haile Selassie headquartered in Addis Ababa At the time the organization evolved up to 54 African states except Morocco 204 The country is driving force of maintaining UN AU peacekeeping missions especially in the Horn of Africa region The AU does not readily aggregate the preference of each member states Therefore every AU norms institution and overlaps as consensus stated in the AU Constitution Act and its various decision and policy making and implementation organs As such the AU offers for member states like Ethiopia to influence and impact on policy internally and regionally 205 206 Today Ethiopian capital Addis Ababa is home of major organizations such as African Union Pan African Chamber of Commerce and Industry United Nations Economic Commission for Africa and African Standby Force See also EditCategory Ethiopian diaspora Foreign aid to Ethiopia List of diplomatic missions in Ethiopia List of diplomatic missions of Ethiopia Ministry of Foreign AffairsReferences Edit Henze Paul B 2000 Layers of Time A History of Ethiopia Hurst amp Company ISBN 978 1 85065 522 0 Henze 2000 p 19 Henze 2000 p 20 a b c d e f g h Foreign Relations Addis Herald Addis Herald Archived from the original on 4 April 2022 Retrieved 4 April 2022 Prijac Lukian 2015 Foreign relations with Ethiopia human and 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1951 PDF in Spanish p 168 Retrieved 29 June 2023 Bilateral agreements Embassy of Ukraine to Ethiopia Retrieved 1 June 2023 The Foreign Office List and Diplomatic and Consular Year Book for Great Britain Foreign Office 1907 p 253 Representation Current notes on international affairs Vol 36 No 12 December 1965 p 866 Retrieved 2 July 2023 Diplomatic Relations between Fiji and Ethiopia as of 6 Jan 2011 United Nations Digital Library Retrieved 24 April 2023 Diplomatic Relations between Solomon Islands and Ethiopia as of 22 Dec 2011 United Nations Digital Library Retrieved 24 April 2023 a b Who can do this job better than Ethiopia FBC HumanitarianResponse www humanitarianresponse info Retrieved 29 August 2022 The United Nations in Ethiopia United Nations in Ethiopia ethiopia un org Retrieved 29 August 2022 EU and Ethiopia www eubfe eu Retrieved 30 August 2022 Speeches delivered by His Imperial Majesty Haile Selassie 1st Emperor of Ethiopia by jahrastafari89 Issuu issuu com Retrieved 2 September 2022 Keeping Peace in Abyei The Role and Contributions of Ethiopia Mehari Taddele Maru meharitaddele info Retrieved 2 September 2022 Large Daniel 2010 STABILISING SUDAN DOMESTIC SUB REGIONAL AND EXTRA REGIONAL CHALLENGES Report Centre for Conflict Resolution JSTOR resrep05124 Further reading EditAmare Tekle The Determinants of the Foreign Policy of Revolutionary Ethiopia Journal of Modern African Studies Vol 27 No 3 Sep 1989 pp 479 502 Orobola Fasehun Nigeria and the Ethiopia Somalia Conflict A Case Study of Continuity in Nigerian Foreign Policy Africa Spectrum 17 1982 pp 183 193External links EditMinistry of Foreign Affairs for Ethiopia s webpage A Tangled Political Landscape Raises Questions About African Ally of the U S by Michael Deibert 12 June 2008 Abdul Mohammed Ethiopia s Strategic Dilemma in the Horn of Africa Crisis in the Horn of Africa Social Science Research Council website U S to Test Soviet New Thinking Talks on Africa The Christian Science Monitor 4 May 1989 nbsp This article incorporates public domain material from The World Factbook CIA Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Foreign relations of Ethiopia amp oldid 1181075819, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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