Foreign relations of Monaco

The Principality of Monaco is a sovereign and independent state, linked closely to France by the Treaty of July 1918, which was formally noted in Article 436 of the Treaty of Versailles of 1919. The foreign policy of Monaco is one illustration of this accord: France has agreed to defend the independence and sovereignty of Monaco, while the Monegasque Government has agreed to exercise its sovereign rights in conformity with French interests, whilst at the same time maintaining complete independence. Since then, the relations between the sovereign states of France and Monaco have been further defined in the Treaty of 1945 and the Agreement of 1963.

Although not a member of the European Union (EU), Monaco is closely associated with the economic apparatus of the EU through its customs union with France and its reliance upon the euro as its official currency.

Monaco actively participates in the United Nations, which it joined in 1993. Monaco joined the Council of Europe on October 4, 2004. Monaco also is a member of many international and intergovernmental organizations, including Interpol, the UNESCO, and the World Health Organization (WHO). The International Hydrographic Organization (IHO) is headquartered in Monaco.

The foreign relations are managed by the Department of External Relations.

Diplomatic relations

[edit]

List of countries which Monaco maintains diplomatic relations with:

# Country Date[1]
1  France 29 April 1873
2  Italy 25 April 1875
 Holy See 21 June 1875
3  Spain 2 June 1876
4  Belgium 2 October 1931
5  Luxembourg 18 December 1947
6  Germany 16 October 1951
7   Switzerland 27 May 1959
8  Netherlands 29 August 1966
9  China 16 January 1995
10  Liechtenstein 16 February 1996
11  El Salvador 14 December 2000[2]
12  Colombia 15 December 2000
13  Maldives 19 March 2001
14  Ecuador 5 April 2001
15  Uruguay 10 April 2001
16  Thailand 26 June 2006
17  Andorra 7 July 2006
18  Austria 17 July 2007[3]
19  Bosnia and Herzegovina 27 July 2006
20  Slovenia 28 November 2006
21  Israel 30 November 2006
22  United States 7 December 2006
23  Ireland 14 December 2006
24  Japan 14 December 2006
25  Philippines 15 December 2006
26  Qatar 26 December 2006
27  Algeria 31 January 2007
28  San Marino 26 March 2007
29  Argentina 29 March 2007
30  Finland 29 March 2007
31  Australia 3 May 2007
32  Malaysia 22 May 2007[4]
33  Egypt 31 May 2007
34  Russia 31 May 2007
35  South Korea 14 June 2007
36  Malta 11 July 2007
37  Serbia 12 July 2007
38  Ukraine 26 July 2007
39  Montenegro 7 September 2007
40  India 21 September 2007
41  United Kingdom 21 September 2007
42  Poland 27 September 2007
 Sovereign Military Order of Malta 18 October 2007
43  Guatemala 2 November 2007[5]
44  Vietnam 29 November 2007
45  Croatia 6 December 2007
46  Slovakia 13 December 2007
47  Cuba 19 December 2007
48  Azerbaijan 19 December 2007
49  Chile 23 January 2008
50  Mongolia 6 February 2008
51  Estonia 7 February 2008
52  Georgia 7 February 2008
53  Dominican Republic 12 February 2008
54  Morocco 12 February 2008
55  Bulgaria 14 February 2008
56  Canada 13 March 2008
57  Romania 19 March 2008
58  Mexico 21 March 2008
59  Jamaica 4 April 2008[6]
60  Seychelles 15 April 2008
61  Greece 15 May 2008
62  Czech Republic 4 July 2008
63  Lesotho 15 July 2008[7]
64  Turkey 16 September 2008[8]
65  Armenia 15 October 2008[9]
66  Latvia 15 October 2008[10]
67  Portugal 13 November 2008
68  Kazakhstan 15 January 2009[11]
69  Sweden 30 January 2009[12]
70  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 12 February 2009[2]
71  Pakistan 24 February 2009[13]
72  Dominica 27 February 2009[14]
73  Venezuela 27 May 2009[15]
74  Equatorial Guinea 16 June 2009[16]
75  Senegal 23 June 2009[17]
76  United Arab Emirates 9 October 2009[2]
77  East Timor 19 February 2010[18]
78  Brazil 14 April 2010[2]
79  Saint Kitts and Nevis 21 April 2010[2]
80  Samoa 4 May 2010[2]
81  Afghanistan 13 October 2010[19]
82  Peru 13 October 2010[20]
83  Norway 16 November 2010[21]
84  Indonesia 17 December 2010[22]
85  South Africa 19 January 2011[23]
86  Cyprus 23 February 2011[23]
87  Botswana 24 February 2011[2]
88  Honduras 25 February 2011[24]
89  Panama 2 March 2011[23]
90  Gabon 28 March 2011[23]
91  Lithuania 11 April 2011[23]
92  Saint Lucia 12 May 2011[2]
93  Denmark 16 June 2011[23]
94  Brunei 22 June 2011[25]
95  Moldova 8 September 2011[23]
96  Mauritania 9 September 2011[23]
97  Palau 26 October 2011[2]
98  Albania 24 November 2011[23]
99  Djibouti 1 December 2011[23]
100  Mali 26 January 2012[26]
101  Solomon Islands 6 March 2012[2]
102    Nepal 26 March 2012[26]
103  Iran 10 May 2012[26]
104  Tuvalu 29 May 2012[2]
105  Paraguay 14 June 2012[26]
106  Nigeria 6 July 2012[26]
107  Malawi 31 July 2012[26]
 Kosovo 24 August 2012[26]
108  Oman 20 February 2013[2]
109  Bahrain 23 September 2013[2]
110  Fiji 13 November 2013[2]
111  Uzbekistan 29 November 2013[27]
112  Republic of the Congo 27 February 2014[28]
113  Rwanda 10 April 2014[29]
114  Sudan 10 April 2014[30]
115  Iceland 5 May 2014[28]
116  Kiribati 20 June 2014[2]
117  Angola 31 July 2014[28]
118  Burkina Faso 19 September 2014[31]
119  Burundi 31 October 2014[28]
120  Turkmenistan 27 August 2015[32]
121  Marshall Islands 29 September 2015[2]
122  Costa Rica 22 October 2015[33]
123  New Zealand 22 October 2015[34]
124  Laos 27 November 2015[35]
125  Togo 9 February 2016[36]
126  Ivory Coast 11 February 2016[37]
127  Belarus 15 April 2016[38]
128  Hungary 2 May 2016[39]
129  Sri Lanka 26 July 2016[2]
130  Tajikistan 13 January 2017[40]
131  Kyrgyzstan 9 March 2017[41]
132  Cabo Verde 10 August 2017[2]
133  Democratic Republic of the Congo 5 July 2018[42]
134  Kuwait 19 July 2018[43]
135  Vanuatu 10 September 2018[2]
136  Tunisia 19 September 2018[44]
137  Barbados 5 December 2018[2]
138  Lebanon 22 January 2019[45]
139  Antigua and Barbuda 28 February 2019[46]
140  Benin 8 March 2019[45]
141  Cambodia 11 July 2019[47]
142  Nicaragua 4 September 2019[2]
143  Namibia 12 September 2019[2]
144  Ghana 29 September 2019[2]
145  North Macedonia 29 September 2019[2]
146  Niger 9 October 2019[45]
147  Grenada 13 October 2020[48]
148  Ethiopia 20 October 2020[49]
149  Madagascar 11 December 2020[50]
150  Jordan 29 April 2021[51]
151  Guinea-Bissau 17 May 2022[52]
152  Mozambique 20 October 2022[53]
153  Saudi Arabia 2 March 2023[2]
154  Bangladesh 13 June 2023[54]
155  Bahamas 17 April 2024[2]
156  Nauru 21 May 2024[2]
157  Bolivia 26 July 2024[2]

Americas

[edit]
Country Formal relations began on Notes
 Canada 13 March 2008
  • Canada is accredited to Monaco from its embassy in Paris and maintains an honorary consulate in Monaco.[55]
  • Monaco is accredited to Canada from its embassy in Washington, D.C., United States, and maintains honorary consulates in Montreal, Toronto and Vancouver.[56]
 Chile 23 January 2008
  • Chile is accredited to Monaco from its embassy in Paris and maintains an honorary consulate in Monaco.
  • Monaco has an honorary consulate in Santiago and in Valparaíso.
 Colombia 15 December 2000
  • Colombia is accredited to Monaco from its embassy in Paris.[57]
  • Monaco has an honorary consulate in Bogotá.[58]
 Mexico 21 March 2008
  • Mexico is accredited to Monaco from its embassy in Paris and maintains an honorary consulate in Monaco.[59]
  • Monaco has an honorary consulate in Mexico City.[60]
 United States 7 December 2006

See Monaco–United States relations

  • The United States and Monaco enjoy excellent relations. From 1956 until her death in 1982, the American-born Grace Kelly was married to Prince Rainier III, Prince Albert's father. The United States does not yet have a diplomatic mission located in Monaco but there is an embassy in Paris, and a consulate general in Marseille.
  • In December 2006, the United States and Monaco upgraded from consular to full diplomatic relations. Shortly thereafter, Craig Stapleton (ambassador to France) was accredited to Monaco, and ambassador Gilles Noghes became the first Monegasque ambassador to the United States.[61]
  • On December 3, 2013, Maguy Maccario Doylee replaced Noghes as the Principality's new emissary to Washington, DC, following her appointment by Prince Albert II of Monaco. Ambassador Maccario Doyle is the first woman to hold the post at the embassy. She previously served as Consul General of Monaco in New York since 1997 and head of the Principality's Tourism Board in North America since the early 1990s.[62]
  • Monaco has an embassy in Washington, D.C. and a consulate-general in New York City.[63]
  • The United States is accredited to Monaco from its embassy in Paris.[64]

Asia

[edit]
Country Formal relations began in Notes
 India 21 September 2007
  • India is accredited to Monaco from its embassy in Paris, France.
 Indonesia 17 December 2010
  • Due to the resemblance of the colors red and white on their flags,[65] the Monégasque government asked Indonesia to modify its flag during the International Hydrographic Congress on 29 April 1952.[66]
  • Indonesia has a non-resident embassy in Paris.[67]
  • Monaco maintains an honorary consulate in Jakarta.[67]
 Israel 30 November 2006
  • Israel is accredited to Monaco from its embassy in Paris, France and has an honorary consulate in Monaco.
  • Monaco has an honorary consulate in Ramat Gan.
 Pakistan 24 January 2009
  • Pakistan is accredited to Monaco from its embassy in Paris[68] and an honorary consulate was inaugurated in 2012 in Monaco.[69]
  • Monaco maintains an honorary consulate in Karachi.[68]
 South Korea 14 June 2007

Diplomatic relations between South Korea and Monaco were established in June 2007.[70]

  • Monaco has an honorary consulate in Seoul.
  • South Korea is accredited to Monaco from its embassy in Paris.[71]
 Turkey 16 September 2008
  • Monaco has an honorary consulate in Istanbul.
  • Turkey is accredited to Monaco from its embassy in Paris, France and has an honorary consulate in Monaco.

Europe

[edit]
Country Formal relations began on Notes
 European Union

Monaco participates in a number of European Union policies through its interaction with France. Monaco is in the EU's customs and VAT area, is a de facto member of the Schengen Area due to its open border with France and uses the euro as its sole currency.

 France 29 April 1873

Formal relations were established in 1918. France has agreed to defend the independence and sovereignty of Monaco, while the Monegasque Government has agreed to exercise its sovereign rights in conformity with French interests. Since then, the relations between the sovereign states of France and Monaco have been further defined in the Treaty of 1945 and the Agreement of 1963.

In 2002, Monaco renegotiated its 1918 treaty with France. In 2005, it was ratified by both parties and entered into force. The terms of the treaty upgrade France's representation in Monaco from Consulate General to that of an embassy; permit, for the first time, other countries to accredit ambassadors to Monaco; and formally recognize the succession scheme set out in the 1962 Constitution, which extends eligibility to the Prince's daughters and other family members.

 Holy See 21 June 1875

It is part of Monaco's generally accepted cultural and political history that Monaco and the Holy See have maintained a diplomatic friendship bound by the Catholic faith since the founding of the Principality. Article 9 of the Monegasque Constitution, dated 17 December 1962, and modified in 2002, establishes the Catholic religion as the official religion of the sovereign state, which is a Catholic constitutional monarchy ruled by the Catholic Grimaldi dynasty. According to the Annuario Pontificio, the official yearbook of the Holy See, Monaco has maintained a diplomatic representative to the Holy See with the rank of minister plenipotentiary since 1915. In 1982, following the July 1981 signing of a new convention between Monaco and the Holy See reaffirming the close Catholic friendship and diplomatic relations which exists between the Catholic Principality and the Holy See, the rank of Monaco's diplomatic legation was elevated from that of a ministerial rank diplomatic legation to that of an embassy, with Cesar Charles Solamito, being elevated from the rank of minister plenipotentiary to ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary in June 1982. Ambassador Solamito served as Monaco's first ambassador to the Holy See until 1997. In 1999, the position of ambassador of Monaco to the Holy See was assumed by Monegasque ambassador Jean Claude Michel.

With respect to the Holy See, the Holy See has only maintained a diplomatic legation in Monaco since 2006. The appointment of a papal diplomatic representative to the Principality was subsequent to the revision of Monaco's treaty with France which was revised in 2002 and ratified in 2005. This revised treaty granted the Principality the sovereign prerogative of establishing formal diplomatic relations with other sovereign states at the highest diplomatic level, that of ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary—for the Holy See this means at the nunzorial level, i.e., that of an apostolic nunciature headed by an apostolic nuncio (apostolic nuncios normally hold the ecclesiastical rank of archbishop). The first, apostolic nuncio to represent the Holy See to Monaco, with residence and coterminous accreditation to the EU in Brussels, is Archbishop Andre Dupuy. Archbishop Dupuy presented his credentials to HSH Prince Albert II on 26 September 2006.[74]

  • The Holy See is accredited to Monaco from its apostolic nunciature in Paris.
  • Monaco has an embassy to the Holy See based in Rome.
 Italy 25 April 1875 See Italy–Monaco relations
 Kosovo 19 March 2008
  • Formal relations were established on 19 March 2008.[75][76]
  • Kosovo is accredited to Monaco from its embassy in Paris.
  • Monaco does not have an accreditation to Kosovo.
 Norway 16 November 2010
  • Norway is accredited to Monaco from its embassy in Paris, France and maintains an honorary consulate in Monaco.[77][78]
  • Monaco maintains an honorary consulate in Oslo.[79]
 Russia 31 May 2007
  • Monaco and Russia had bilateral relations since 1858, when Russia and Monaco signed treaties and agreements of extradition of criminals, of mutual legal assistance, on recognition of civil status of natural persons and of medical aid. However diplomatic relations were suspended in 1917.
  • Diplomatic relations were re-established in April 2002.
  • Monaco is accredited to Russia from its Ministry of Foreign Affairs based in Monaco and maintains honorary consulates in Moscow, Rostov-on-Don and in Saint Petersburg.
  • Russia is accredited to Monaco from its embassy in Paris and maintains an honorary consulate in Monaco.
 Serbia 12 July 2007
  • Both countries have established diplomatic relations in November 2007.[80]
  • Monaco does not have an accreditation to Serbia.
  • Serbia is accredited to Monaco from its embassy in Paris and maintains an honorary consulate in Monaco.
 Spain 2 June 1876
  • Monaco has an embassy in Madrid.
  • Spain is accredited to Monaco from its embassy in Paris, France.
 Ukraine 26 July 2007
  • Both countries have established diplomatic relations 26 July 2007.[81]
  • Monaco does not have an accreditation to Ukraine.
  • Ukraine is accredited to Monaco from its embassy in Paris and maintains an honorary consulate in Monaco.
 United Kingdom 21 September 2007 See Foreign relations of the United Kingdom

Monaco established diplomatic relations with the United Kingdom on 21 September 2007.

  • Monaco maintains an embassy in London.[82]
  • The United Kingdom is not accredited to Monaco through an embassy; the UK develops relations through its embassy in Paris, France.[83]

Both countries share common membership of the Council of Europe, and the OSCE.

See also

[edit]
[edit]

References

[edit]
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