Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Guatemala) explained

Agency Name:Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Guatemala
— MINEX —
Jurisdiction:Government of Guatemala
Headquarters:
2da avenida 4-17 zona 10
Guatemala City, Guatemala
Coordinates:14.6094°N -90.5136°W
Chief1 Name:Carlos Ramiro Martínez
Chief1 Position:Foreign Affairs Minister

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Spanish; Castilian: Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores, MINEX) of Guatemala is the executive office in charge of conducting the international relations of the country. This ministry can give the Guatemalan nationality, enforces the immigration laws of the country, preserves the national limits and boundaries, negotiates international treaties and agreements with other countries and preserves the copies of the ones signed by Guatemala. It is appointed by law to preserve the national interests overseas and to be part of the National Security System.

Background and history

Starting in the 19th century, right after independence from Spain was signed, the public administration was slowly organized. There was a first stage when Guatemala was a part of the United Provinces of Central America, and a second stage starting in 1847, when Guatemala became an independent, free and sovereign republic to administer its own public affairs. Through that time, the different executive offices were organized as "secretariats", following the Spanish nomenclature. This terminology included the Secretariat of Foreign Affairs, which kept its name until after the Revolution of 1944. Decree #47, passed by the Revolutionary Joint on December 27, 1944, still used this category. However, when the new Constitution came into force on March 15, 1945, the Constitutional system created the Ministries of State. For that reason, Congress passed a bill for the organization of the Executive Branch, which first spoke of a Foreign Affairs Ministry, on April 25, 1945.[1]

Foreign affairs

Currently, Guatemala holds diplomatic relations with 152 countries. It has 41 embassies throughout the World, and 4 missions in International Organizations.

Embassy[2] Ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary
ArgentinaRony Abiú Chalí López
AustraliaConnie Taracena Secaira
AustriaAntonio Roberto Castellanos López
BelgiumJosé Alberto Briz Gutiérrez
Belize
BrasilJulio Armando Martini Herrera
CanadaCarlos Humberto Jiménez Licona
Chile Blanca Rita Claverie de Scioli
Colombia
Costa RicaJuan Carlos Orellana Juárez
CubaHéctor Iván Espinoza Farfán
Dominican RepublicRudy Armando Coxaj López
EcuadorLuigi William Ixcot Rojas
EgyptLuis Raúl Estévez López
El SalvadorLuis Rolando Torres Casanova
FranceFrancisco Gross-Hernández Kramer
GermanyJosé Francisco Calí Tzay
Holy SeeAlfredo Vásquez Rivera
HondurasMelvin Armindo Valdez González
IndiaGeovani René Castillo Polanco
IndonesiaJacobo Cuyún Salguero
IsraelAtzum Arévalo de Moscoso
Italy
JapanÁngela María de Lourdes Chávez Bietti
MexicoArturo Romeo Duarte Ortiz
Morocco
NetherlandsGladys Marithza Ruiz de Vielman
Nicaragua
PanamaPedro Amado Robles Valle
PeruIrma Verónica Araujo Samayoa
RussiaGuisela Atalida Godínez Sazo
South KoreaSara Angelina Solís Castañeda
SpainFernando Molina Girón
SwedenGeorges De La Roche Du Ronzet Plihal
SwitzerlandLuis Fernando Carranza Cifuentes
TaiwanOlga María Aguja Zúñiga
Trinidad and TobagoMario Estuardo Torres Townson
TurkeyLars Henrik Pira Pérez
United KingdomAcisclo Domingo Valladares Molina
United States of AmericaManuel Alfredo Espina Pinto
UruguayAntonio Arenales Forno
VenezuelaSandra América Noriega Urizar
Mission[3] Ambassador extraordinary and plenipotentiary
OASGabriel Edgardo Aguilera Peralta
WTO
UN (New York)Jorge Skinner-Klee Arenales
UN (Geneva)Carla María Rodríguez Mancia

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Nuestra Historia. Minex. 7 January 2014.
  2. Web site: Embajadas de Guatemala en el Mundo. Minex. 7 January 2014.
  3. Web site: Misiones de Guatemala ante Organismos Internacionales. Minex. 7 January 2014.