List of diplomatic missions of Nepal
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This is a list of diplomatic missions of Nepal, excluding honorary consulates.[1] Nepal's first semblance of a diplomatic network started in the reign of King Prithivi Narayan Shah the Great, when in 1769 he established a foreign office called Jaishi Kotha. Over centuries the office slowly grew in stature until it became a government Department in 1934, although by the time of the revolution in 1950 Nepal only had diplomatic relations with India, Britain, France and the United States. The Nepalese Ministry of Foreign Affairs rapidly expanded in the 1950s and 1960s, driven by Nepal's precarious strategic position sandwiched between India and China.
Contents
Africa
- Egypt
- Cairo (Embassy)
- South Africa
- Pretoria (Embassy)
Americas
- Brazil
- Brasilia (Embassy)
- Canada
- Ottawa (Embassy)
- United States
Asia
- Bahrain
- Manama (Embassy)
- Bangladesh
- Dhaka (Embassy)
- China
- India
- Israel
- Tel Aviv (Embassy)
- Japan
- Tokyo (Embassy)
- Republic of Korea
- Seoul (Embassy)
- Kuwait
- Kuwait City (Embassy)
- Malaysia
- Kuala Lumpur (Embassy)
- Myanmar
- Yangon (Embassy)
- Oman
- Muscat (Embassy)
- Pakistan
- Islamabad (Embassy)
- Qatar
- Doha (Embassy)
- Saudi Arabia
- Sri Lanka
- Colombo (Embassy)
- Thailand
- Bangkok (Embassy)
- United Arab Emirates
- Abu Dhabi (Embassy)
Europe
- Belgium
- Brussels (Embassy)
- Denmark
- Copenhagen (Embassy)
- France
- Paris (Embassy)
- Germany
- Berlin (Embassy)
- Russia
- Moscow (Embassy)
- United Kingdom
Oceania
Multilateral organisations
- Brussels (permanent mission to the European Union)
- Geneva (permanent mission)
- New York (permanent mission to the United Nations)
External links
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Embassies of Nepal. |