Diplomatic missions of Estonia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Estonia (re-)established a foreign ministry on 12 April 1990 while the country was slowly becoming independent from the Soviet Union, with the symbols and instruments of soverignty were progressively being reintroduced. The events in August later that year when a failed coup in Moscow accelerated the process for independence. The staff of the ministry worked a seven-day work week with threadbare facilities and supplies until January 1992, after they had secured Estonia's international recognition, and opened missions in New York, Helsinki, Stockholm, Copenhagen, Bonn, Paris and Moscow[1].
As the current Estonian government considers Estonia's incorporation into the Soviet Union as being illegal, it assumes that the foreign ministry has been in continual operation since 1918.
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[edit] Europe
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[edit] North America
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[edit] Middle East
[edit] Asia
[edit] Multilateral organisations
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