Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Ho Chi Minh City
- Han, Kuo-Yao [zh], Director General[1]
The Taipei Economic and Cultural Office, Ho Chi Minh City (Chinese: 駐胡志明市台北經濟文化辦事處; pinyin: Zhù Húzhìmíng Shì Táiběi Jīngjì Wénhuà Bànshì Chù) (Vietnamese: Văn phòng Kinh tế Văn hóa Đài Bắc tại thành phố Hồ Chí Minh) represents the interests of Taiwan in the southern regions of Vietnam and Cambodia, functioning as a de facto consulate in the absence of diplomatic relations. There is also a Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Vietnam located in Hanoi,[2] which has responsibility for relations with the northern regions of Vietnam as well as Laos.[3]
Its counterpart body in Taiwan is the Vietnam Economic and Culture Office in Taipei.[4]
History
The Ho Chi Minh City office, along with its counterpart in Hanoi, was established in June 1992.[5] Until 1975, Taiwan, as the Republic of China, had an embassy in Saigon.[6] From 1964 to 1972, General Hu Lien served as the ambassador.[7] However, the embassy suspended operations after the defeat of South Vietnam by the Communist North, which has diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China.[8]
See also
- Taiwan–Vietnam relations
- List of diplomatic missions of Taiwan
- List of diplomatic missions in Vietnam
- Taipei Economic and Cultural Representative Office
References
- ^ Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Vietnam, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Republic of China (Taiwan)
- ^ "Taipei Economic and Cultural Office, Hanoi, Vietnam". Archived from the original on 2016-07-27. Retrieved 2016-03-16.
- ^ Asia Pacific Area, Bureau of Consular Affairs, Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Republic of China)
- ^ Vietnam Economic and Cultural Office Archived 2016-03-14 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Foreign Policy of the New Taiwan: Pragmatic Diplomacy in Southeast Asia, Jie Chen, Edward Elgar Publishing, 2002, page 81
- ^ Maoists kill Chinese publisher in Saigon, Current Issue, December 5, 1971
- ^ Free China Review, Volume 20, W.Y. Tsao, 1970, page 4
- ^ The Republic Of China Yearbook 1996, David Robertson, Taylor & Francis, 1996, page 652
- v
- t
- e
- Argentina
- Belize [ja]
- Brazil
- São Paulo [zh]
- Canada
- Toronto [zh]
- Vancouver [zh]
- Montreal [zh]
- Chile [zh]
- Colombia
- Ecuador [zh]
- Guatemala [zh]
- Haiti [zh]
- Mexico
- Paraguay [ja]
- Ciudad del Este [zh]
- Peru
- United States
- Atlanta
- Boston
- Chicago [zh]
- Denver [zh]
- Honolulu
- Houston
- Los Angeles
- Miami
- New York [zh]
- San Francisco
- Seattle
- Bahrain [zh]
- Brunei [zh]
- China
- India
- Indonesia
- Surabaya [zh]
- Israel
- Japan
- Fukuoka [ja]
- Naha [ja]
- Osaka [ja]
- Sapporo [ja]
- Yokohama [ja]
- Jordan
- Kuwait
- Malaysia
- Mongolia
- Myanmar
- Oman [zh]
- Philippines
- Saudi Arabia
- Singapore
- South Korea
- Busan [ko]
- Thailand
- United Arab Emirates
- Vietnam
- Ho Chi Minh City
- Australia
- Brisbane [zh]
- Melbourne [zh]
- Sydney [zh]
- Fiji [zh]
- Marshall Islands [ja]
- Nauru [ja]
- New Zealand
- Auckland [zh]
- Palau [ja]
- Papua New Guinea [zh]
- Tuvalu [ja]
- Bangladesh
- Bolivia
- Honduras
- San Pedro Sula [ja]
- Libya
- Nicaragua [ja]
- Norway
- Peru
- Uruguay
- United States
- Venezuela
This ROC (Taiwanese) politics–related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e