Embassy of the United Kingdom, Pyongyang
The British Embassy Pyongyang is the British sovereign's diplomatic mission to the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, representing the United Kingdom and the United Kingdom's interests.[2] It is located in the Munsu-dong compound (in the Taedonggang District), where most of the diplomatic missions to North Korea are located, with the exception of the Russian and Chinese missions.[3]
The British Embassy Pyongyang | |
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The British Embassy Pyongyang. Emblems of Germany, Sweden and France as used by the German Embassy, the Swedish Embassy and the French Office of Cooperation respectively can also be seen alongside the British one. | |
Location | |
Address | Munsu-dong Compound |
Coordinates | 39.0225°N 125.7940°E |
Ambassador | Colin Crooks LVO[1] |
The British Embassy is situated in the Munsu-dong diplomatic compound, sharing the building with the German, French and Swedish missions to North Korea, in what was originally the East German mission and was transferred over for use by the government of the present Germany upon German reunification. The former East German embassy was established at a time when North Korea relied almost exclusively but equally on both the Soviet Union and other Warsaw Pact and Comecon Countries (of which East Germany were members of both) as well as on China for external trade.[3]
History
The UK and North Korea had no formal diplomatic relations until 12 December 2000, when diplomatic missions in London and Pyongyang were established. James Hoare was chargé d'affaires from 2001–02 until a permanent ambassador was appointed by the UK Government.[3] and the first full-time accredited British diplomat was James Warren. The embassy itself opened in July 2001 and the first ambassador, David Slinn, arrived in North Korea in November 2002.[2][3]
Incidents
On 5 April 2013 the North Korean government advised the British Embassy, and all other missions, that the safety of their missions could not be assured past 10 April 2013. This was part of the North Korean government's response to United Nations Security Council Resolution 2094 and deterioration of relations between North Korea and the United States.[4]
See also
References
- Ambassador to the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea in December 2018 - UK Government(December 2018)
- Foreign and Commonwealth Office. "British Embassy Pyongyang". gov.uk. Retrieved 6 April 2013.
- Hoare, JE (2004). "A Brush with History: Opening the British Embassy Pyongyang, 2001–2002". Papers of the British Association for Korean Studies. 9. Archived from the original on 4 November 2006. Retrieved 6 April 2013.
- Moore, Malcolm (5 April 2013). "North Korea: we can't keep you safe, Pyongyang tells foreign embassies". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 6 April 2013.
External links
- British Embassy Pyongyang – gov.uk