List of diplomatic missions of Sweden
This is a list of diplomatic missions of Sweden. Sweden has a moderately sized diplomatic network of 79 embassies and 7 consulates general, supplemented by honorary consulates, cultural centres and trade missions. In countries without Swedish representation, Swedish citizens can seek assistance from public officials in the foreign services of any of the other Nordic countries, in accordance with the Helsinki Treaty.[1][2]
Of note Sweden was the first Western country to have an embassy in Pyongyang.[3] The embassy in Pyongyang continues to provide limited consular services to citizens of several Western countries without a presence in North Korea and acts as the consular protecting power of the United States, Canada, and Australia since 1995.[4][5]
In January 2010, the Swedish Foreign Ministry announced that its embassies in Bratislava (Slovakia), Dakar (Senegal), Dublin (Ireland), Ljubljana (Slovenia), Luxembourg (Luxembourg), and Sofia (Bulgaria) would be closed down, while existing section offices in Pristina, Tbilisi, Chisinau, Tirana, Bamako, Ouagadougou, Monrovia, Kigali, La Paz and Phnom Penh would be upgraded to embassies.[6]
In December 2010, it was announced by the Swedish Foreign Ministry that an additional five embassies would close down; the embassies affected were the ones in Brussels, Belgium, Buenos Aires, Argentina, Hanoi, Vietnam, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia and Luanda, Angola.[7]
In August 2011, an agreement between the Social Democrats and the governing Reinfeldt Cabinet was announced, with the purpose of keeping the Swedish embassies in Argentina, Vietnam, Malaysia and Angola open.[8]
On August 30, 2012, Sweden closed its embassy in Minsk, with the Estonian Embassy charged with representing Swedish interests in Belarus.[9]
On November 2, 2016 the Swedish Embassy was re-opened in Lima, Peru.[10] Six days later, on November 8, the Swedish Embassy in Manila, Philippines, was re-opened, eight years after it was closed down.
In November 2021 the Swedish government announced that it would re-open embassies in Dublin and Brussels and a consulate-general in San Francisco.[11]
Africa
- Algeria
- Angola
- Burkina Faso
- Ouagadougou (Embassy)
- Democratic Republic of the Congo
- Kinshasa (Embassy)
- Egypt
- Cairo (Embassy)
- Ethiopia
- Addis Ababa (Embassy)
- Kenya
- Nairobi (Embassy)
- Liberia
- Monrovia (Embassy)
- Mali
- Bamako (Embassy)
- Morocco
- Rabat (Embassy)
- Mozambique
- Maputo (Embassy)
- Nigeria
- Abuja (Embassy)
- Rwanda
- Kigali (Embassy)
- South Africa
- Pretoria (Embassy)
- Sudan
- Khartoum (Embassy)
- Tanzania
- Dar es Salaam (Embassy)
- Tunisia
- Tunis (Embassy)
- Uganda
- Kampala (Embassy)
- Zambia
- Lusaka (Embassy)
- Zimbabwe
- Harare (Embassy)
Americas
- Argentina
- Bolivia
- La Paz (Embassy)
- Brazil
- Brasília (Embassy)
- Canada
- Chile
- Santiago (Embassy)
- Colombia
- Bogotá (Embassy)
- Cuba
- Havana (Embassy)
- Guatemala
- Guatemala City (Embassy)
- Mexico
- Peru
- Lima (Embassy)
- United States
Asia
- Armenia
- Yerevan (Embassy)
- Azerbaijan
- Baku (Embassy)
- Bangladesh
- Dhaka (Embassy)
- China
- Cyprus
- Nicosia (Embassy)
- Georgia
- Tbilisi (Embassy)
- India
- New Delhi (Embassy)
- Indonesia
- Jakarta (Embassy)
- Iran
- Tehran (Embassy)
- Iraq
- Israel
- Tel Aviv (Embassy)
- Japan
- Tokyo (Embassy)
- Jordan
- Amman (Embassy)
- Kazakhstan
- Nur-Sultan (Embassy)
- Lebanon
- Beirut (Embassy)
- Malaysia
- Kuala Lumpur (Embassy)
- North Korea
- Pakistan
- Islamabad (Embassy)
- Palestine
- Philippines
- Manila (Embassy)
- Qatar
- Doha (Embassy)
- Saudi Arabia
- Riyadh (Embassy)
- Singapore
- Singapore (Embassy)
- South Korea
- Seoul (Embassy)
- Syria
- Damascus (Embassy)
- Taiwan
- Thailand
- Turkey
- United Arab Emirates
- Abu Dhabi (Embassy)
- Vietnam
- Hanoi (Embassy)
Europe
- Albania
- Tirana (Embassy)
- Austria
- Vienna (Embassy)
- Belarus
- Minsk (Embassy)
- Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Sarajevo (Embassy)
- Croatia
- Zagreb (Embassy)
- Czech Republic
- Denmark
- Estonia
- Tallinn (Embassy)
- Finland
- France
- Germany
- Greece
- Holy See
- Hungary
- Budapest (Embassy)
- Iceland
- Reykjavík (Embassy)
- Italy
- Kosovo
- Pristina (Embassy)
- Latvia
- Riga (Embassy)
- Lithuania
- Vilnius (Embassy)
- Moldova
- Chişinău (Embassy)
- Netherlands
- The Hague (Embassy)
- North Macedonia
- Skopje (Embassy)
- Norway
- Poland
- Warsaw (Embassy)
- Portugal
- Lisbon (Embassy)
- Romania
- Bucharest (Embassy)
- Russia
- Moscow (Embassy)
- Saint Petersburg (Consulate-General)
- Serbia
- Belgrade (Embassy)
- Spain
- Madrid (Embassy)
- Switzerland
- Bern (Embassy)
- Ukraine
- Kyiv (Embassy)
- United Kingdom
Oceania
Multilateral organizations
- Brussels (Permanent Missions to the European Union and NATO)
- Geneva (Permanent Mission to the Office of the United Nations and other international organizations)
- New York City (Permanent Mission to the United Nations)
- Strasbourg (Mission to the Council of Europe)
- Paris (Permanent Missions to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development and UNESCO)
- Vienna (Mission to the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe)
Gallery
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Building housing the embassy in Athens
-
Embassy in Berlin
-
Embassy in Bern
-
Embassy in Budapest
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Embassy in Buenos Aires
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Embassy in Canberra
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Embassy in Copenhagen
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Embassy in The Hague
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Embassy in Helsinki
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Consulate-General in Istanbul
-
Embassy in Kyiv
-
Embassy in La Paz
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Embassy in Lisbon
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Embassy in London
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Embassy in Madrid
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Embassy in Moscow
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Embassy in Oslo
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Embassy Ottawa
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Embassy in Paris
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Embassy in Prague
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Embassy in Pyongyang
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Embassy in Riga
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Embassy in Rome
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Embassy in Sarajevo
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Embassy in Skopje
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Embassy in Tallinn
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Embassy in Tbilisi
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Embassy in Tirana
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Embassy in Tokyo
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Embassy in Vienna
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Embassy in Vilnius
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Embassy in Warsaw
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Embassy in Washington, D.C.
-
Embassy in Yerevan
See also
- Foreign relations of Sweden
- Sweden and the United Nations
- List of diplomatic missions of the Nordic countries
Notes
References
- ^ "Meld. St. 12 (2010–2011)". April 2011.
- ^ "Treaty of Cooperation between Denmark, Finland, Iceland, Norway and Sweden (the Helsinki Treaty)" (PDF). Article 34.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ "About the Embassy". Embassy of Sweden, Pyongyang. Retrieved 19 August 2011.
- ^ "Om ambassaden" (in Swedish). Embassy of Sweden, Pyongyang. Retrieved 19 August 2011.
- ^ "Foreign Relations: North Korea". USA.gov. Archived from the original on 30 September 2011. Retrieved 19 August 2011.
- ^ "Sweden to open embassy in Tirana Albania". Balkans.com. 7 May 2010. Archived from the original on 4 February 2011. Retrieved 27 May 2010.
- ^ "Sverige stänger fem ambassader". Regeringskansliet. 22 December 2010. Archived from the original on 25 December 2010. Retrieved 27 December 2010.
- ^ "S backar – ambassader räddas". DN.se. Dagens Nyheter. 1 August 2011. Retrieved 6 August 2011.
- ^ "Ambassaden inte öppen för allmänheten | SwedenAbroad". www.swedenabroad.com (in Swedish). Retrieved 2017-07-19.
- ^ "Lima | SwedenAbroad". www.swedenabroad.com. Retrieved 2016-12-14.
- ^ https://www.government.se/press-releases/2021/11/government-intends-to-open-embassy-in-dublin-and-consulate-general-in-san-francisco/
- ^ "About the Consulate General". Sweden Abroad. 22 May 2020.