Belarus–Ukraine relations

Belarus–Ukraine relations (Belarusian: Беларуска-ўкраінскія адносіны, Byelaruska-ŭkrainskiya adnosiny, Ukrainian: Українсько-білоруські відносини, Ukrains'ko-Bilorus'ki vidnosyny, Russian: Белорусско-украинские отношения, Belorussko-ukrainskiye otnosheniya) are foreign relations between Belarus and Ukraine. Both countries are full members of the Baku Initiative and Central European Initiative.

Belarus-Ukraine relations

Belarus

Ukraine

History

Both countries were successively ruled by the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, the Second Polish Republic, and ultimately, the Russian Empire. Prior to the 1991 breakup, both countries were part of the Soviet Union as the Belarusian SSR and Ukrainian SSR when they were the founding members of the United Nations in 1945. Being Slavic nations, both Belarus and Ukraine share closely related cultures and are predominantly inhabited by the East Slavic ethnic groups of Belarusians and Ukrainians respectively, along with a few Russians. Today, the two countries share an 891–km border.

An agreement on the state border between Belarus and Ukraine signed in 1997 was to be submitted to the Belarusian parliament for ratification after Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko and former Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko finished the process of the formalization of the border issues between the two states early November 2009.[1]

Resident diplomatic missions

  • Belarus has an embassy in Kiev.[2]
  • Ukraine has an embassy in Minsk and a consulate-general in Brest.[3]

See also

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.