Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Greece) explained

Post:Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Body:the Hellenic Republic
Native Name:Υπουργείο Εξωτερικών
Insignia:Coat of Arms of Greece (Monochromatic).svg
Insigniasize:85px
Insigniacaption:Coat of arms of the Hellenic Republic
Incumbent:Giorgos Gerapetritis
Incumbentsince:27 June 2023
Appointer:Prime Minister of Greece
Formation:16 January 1822
Website:https://www.mfa.gr/en/

The Hellenic Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Greek, Modern (1453-);: Υπουργείο Εξωτερικών) is a government department of Greece, headed by the Minister for Foreign Affairs. The ministry has its headquarters in Athens.

The incumbent minister is Giorgos Gerapetritis in the Second Cabinet of Kyriakos Mitsotakis.

History

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs was first established in 1822 by the First National Assembly at Epidaurus as the Secretariat for External Affairs. In 1844, it was officially designated the Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

Leadership

Official development assistance

Greece experienced a debt crisis and recession in the past decade that has resulted in significant cuts to official development assistance (ODA). Greece’s development co-operation consists primarily of multilateral expenditure, principally to European Union (EU) institutions, and in-donor refugee costs. According to the OECD, Greece’s total ODA (USD 305.4 million, preliminary data) decreased in 2022 due to a decrease in its bilateral and multilateral ODA. It represented 0.14% of gross national income (GNI).[1]

List of ministers for foreign affairs since 1974

See main article: List of foreign ministers of Greece.

PhotoNameTook officeLeft officeParty
George Mavros24 July 19749 October 1974Centre Union
Dimitrios Bitsios17 October 197420 November 1977
Panagiotis Papaligouras29 November 197710 May 1978
George Rallis10 May 197810 May 1980
Konstantinos Mitsotakis10 May 198021 October 1981
21 October 198126 July 1985
Karolos Papoulias26 July 19852 July 1989
Tzannis Tzannetakis2 July 198912 October 1989New Democracy
Georgios Papoulias12 October 198923 November 1989Independent
Antonis Samaras23 November 198916 February 1990New Democracy
Georgios Papoulias16 February 199011 April 1990Independent
Antonis Samaras11 April 199014 April 1992New Democracy
Konstantinos Mitsotakis14 April 19927 August 1992
Michalis Papakonstantinou7 August 199213 October 1993
Karolos Papoulias13 October 199322 January 1996PASOK
Theodoros Pangalos22 January 199618 February 1999
George Papandreou18 February 199913 February 2004
Tasos Giannitsis13 February 200410 March 2004
Petros Molyviatis10 March 200415 February 2006New Democracy
Dora Bakoyannis15 February 20067 October 2009
George Papandreou7 October 20097 September 2010PASOK
Dimitris Droutsas7 September 201017 June 2011
Stavros Lambrinidis17 June 201111 November 2011
Stavros Dimas11 November 201117 May 2012New Democracy
Petros Molyviatis17 May 201221 June 2012
21 June 201225 June 2013
25 June 201327 January 2015PASOK
Nikos Kotzias27 January 201527 August 2015Syriza
Petros Molyviatis28 August 201521 September 2015New Democracy
Nikos Kotzias23 September 201520 October 2018Syriza
Alexis Tsipras (also PM)20 October 201815 February 2019
15 February 20199 July 2019
Nikos Dendias9 July 201925 May 2023New Democracy
Vasilis Kaskarelis25 May 202327 June 2023Independent
Giorgos Gerapetritis27 June 2023presentNew Democracy

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: OECD Development Co-operation Profiles. 4 October 2023.