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Foreign Diplomatic Missions in the Philippines, and Philippine Diplomatic Missions abroad

98K views 180 replies 53 participants last post by  Yahooo 
#1 ·
This thread is for foreign diplomatic missions (embassies, consulates, cultural and/or trade offices, etc.) that are based in the Philippines; and vice versa, Philippine diplomatic missions in other nations.

EMBASSIES IN THE PHILIPPINES
Code:
[B][U]Located in MANILA[/U][/B]
Australia
Kuwait
Palau
United States
Vietnam

[B][U]Located in MAKATI CITY[/U][/B]
Argentina
Austria
Bangladesh
Belgium
Brazil
Brunei Darussalam
Cambodia
Canada
Chile
China
Cuba
Czech Republic
Finland
Germany
India
Indonesia
Israel
Italy
Laos
Malaysia
Mexico
Myanmar
Netherlands
New Zealand
Nigeria
Norway
Pakistan
Qatar
Romania
Russia
Singapore
South Africa
South Korea
Spain
Sweden
Switzerland
Thailand
Turkey
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom
Venezuela

[B][U]Located in PASAY CITY[/U][/B]
Japan
Saudi Arabia

[B][U]Located in QUEZON CITY[/U][/B]
Colombia

CONSULATES IN THE PHILIPPINES
Code:
[B][U]Located in MANILA[/U][/B]
Jamaica
Tanzania
Tunisia

[B][U]Located in CEBU CITY[/U][/B]
Austria
Canada
China
Japan
Netherlands
Thailand
Turkey
United States

[B][U]Located in DAVAO CITY[/U][/B]
Czech Republic
Indonesia
Japan
Malaysia

[B][U]Located in LAOAG CITY[/U][/B]
China

[B][U]Located in MANDALUYONG CITY[/U][/B]
Peru
Slovenia

[B][U]Located in MAKATI CITY[/U][/B]
Costa Rica
Croatia
Denmark
Ecuador
Iceland
Ireland
Seychelles
Ukraine
Uruguay
Vanuatu

[B][U]Located in MUNTINLUPA CITY[/U][/B]
Timor-Leste

[B][U]Located in PASAY CITY[/U][/B]
Latvia

[B][U]Located in PASIG CITY[/U][/B]
Malta
Marshall Islands

[B][U]Located in QUEZON CITY[/U][/B]
Cyprus

[B][U]Located in TAGUIG CITY[/U][/B]
Senegal


**Taiwan has a "Cultural Office" in MANILA

NON-RESIDENT DIPLOMATIC MISSIONS TO THE PHILIPPINES
Code:
[B][U]Located in BANGKOK[/U][/B]
Nepal
North Korea
Poland

[B][U]Located in BEIJING[/U][/B]
Albania
Bahrain
Eritrea
Lesotho

[B][U]Located in HANOI[/U][/B]
Mongolia

[B][U]Located in JAKARTA[/U][/B]
Hungary
Serbia
Slovakia

[B][U]Located in KUALA LUMPUR[/U][/B]
Algeria
Fiji
Ghana
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Mauritius
Oman
Sudan
Swaziland
Yemen
Zimbabwe

[B][U]Located in SEOUL[/U][/B]
Gabon

[B][U]Located in SINGAPORE[/U][/B]
Angola

[B][U]Located in TAIPEI[/U][/B]
Gambia

[B][U]Located in TOKYO[/U][/B]
Afghanistan
Belarus
Benin
Bolivia
Bulgaria
Cote D'Ivoire
Djibouti
El Salvador
Ethiopia
Guatemala
Guinea
Honduras
Jordan
Lebanon
Lithuania
Mali
Morocco
Nicaragua
Senegal
Zambia

[B][U]Located in WELLINGTON[/U][/B]
Samoa
 
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#95 ·
Thomas confirmed as U.S. ambassador to Manila
MANILA, March 23 (PNA) — The nomination of Harry K. Thomas Jr. as U.S. ambassador to the Philippines has been confirmed by the U.S. Senate, paving the way for his arrival in Manila “within the coming weeks,” according to the U.S. embassy in Manila.

The confirmation of the U.S. Senate on March 19 “is a necessary step under the U.S. Constitution in the ambassadorial nomination process,” the embassy said in announcing the new assignment.

Thomas replaces Kristie A. Kenney, who left Manila in early January.

The embassy said he is learning Tagalog (Filipino) in preparation for his new assignment, the first in Southeast Asia.

Official biography released by the embassy said that Thomas’s last ambassadorial assignment was in Bangladesh from 2003 to 2005. He joined the Foreign Service in 1984.

He is a career member of the Senior Foreign Service and served most recently as Director General of the Foreign Service and Director, Human Resources.

He previously served as a Special Assistant to the Secretary and Executive Secretary of the Department.

He also served in the White House as the Director for South Asia at the National Security Council from 2001 to 2002.

His other postings included New Delhi in India, Harare in Zimbabwe, Kaduna in Nigeria, and Lima in Peru.

The incoming ambassador is from the State of New York, and speaks Spanish, Hindi, and Bangla and is learning Tagalog.

He is a graduate of the College of the Holy Cross and pursued further study at Columbia University. (PNA)
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=0&nid=1&rid=266023
 
#96 ·
RP heads of posts in Middle East/Africa meet in Manila on policy directions in the region
MANILA, March 24 (PNA) — Filipino ambassadors and consuls-general based in the Middle East and Africa, numbering about 20, begin today a meeting on the region’s policy directions and work programs for the medium and long-term, it was announced by the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA).

At what is formally called the Regional Consultative Meeting/Middle East and Africa Political Consultations of Heads of Posts (RCM/MEAPCHOPS), the 20 diplomats will discuss and share their experiences, issues and concerns on the three pillars of Philippine foreign policy, DFA added. The meeting ends on Friday.

The three such pillars are the preservation and enhancement of national security, the promotion and attainment of economic security, and the protection of the rights and promotion of the welfare and interest of Filipinos overseas, also known as assistance to nationals (ATN).

“For this particular RCM, topics will be specific to the Middle East and Africa, as majority of our Filipinos are located in those areas, and our embassies and consulates-general should be equipped to address their needs. Also, the region is an unexplored area for economic cooperation, which can help us in our own development,” DFA Undersecretary for Migrant Workers Affairs Esteban B. Conejos Jr. explained.

There will also be a consultation session with Secretary Marianito Roque of the Department of Labor and Employment, according to Conejos.

The pillar of ATN, being the major bulk of work of the embassies and consulates-general in the region, will be discussed lengthily in such topics as reform packages for household service workers, addressing the deployment ban in some areas of the region, protection of migrant workers, human trafficking and illegal recruitment, Conejos said.

In the political/security aspect, the Filipino diplomats are expected to talk about the security situation and transnational crimes.

Such issues as minerals development, Islamic finance and banking, mainstreaming the halal industry, and official development assistance form part of the discussion on the pillar of economic diplomacy.

DFA said the RCM/MEAPCHOPS is a planning exercise that will determine the policy direction and work program of the Philippine embassies and consulates-general in a given region for the short and medium term. (PNA)
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=0&nid=1&rid=266329
 
#97 ·
Relief of RP envoy to Germany stirs rage
THE SUDDEN REMOVAL OF the Philippine ambassador to Germany may have more to do with bilateral relations between the two countries than being another case of an unconstitutional “midnight” appointment by President Macapagal-Arroyo.

A former diplomat raised this possibility Saturday in the wake of the relief of career Ambassador Delia Domingo-Albert, who has been replaced by 87-year-old businessman Alfonso Yuchengco.

The move sent shock waves within the Department of Foreign Affairs. Ironically, Albert learned about her removal last week when she flew to Manila to receive the “Most Outstanding Filipino Woman in Global Diplomacy” award from no less than the President herself.

“It’s really unusual because we normally give our officers a 60-day recall notice so he or she can do the traditional farewell calls and also officially notify the foreign office of the host country,” a senior DFA official told the Inquirer Saturday. The official asked not to be named because of the sensitive nature of the matter and a lack of authority to discuss it publicly.

Said Assistant Foreign Secretary Vicky Bataclan, the president of the Union of Foreign Service Officers:

“Our beef is that Mr. Alfonso Yuchengco’s appointment is void. There is no Commission on Appointments (CA) to confirm his nomination, which is [needed for] the necessary steps, like requesting his agrement from the German government.

In any case, all political ambassadors are coterminous with [the President]. This is, thus, a useless nomination to a nonexistent CA, almost void ab initio, if not unconstitutional.”

Bataclan added that by operation of law, all political ambassadors should be out of their countries of assignment on or before June 30.

No respect for int’l protocol

Jose Apolinario Lozada—a former envoy to Austria, Palau and the Holy See—said the case was more than just a last-minute appointment made by Ms Arroyo, whose term ends on June 30.

“Is there something wrong with our bilateral relations with Germany that the President had to replace Delia Albert immediately?” he said in a phone interview. “Why the haste?”

Lozada, who is running for senator under Joseph Estrada’s Pwersa ng Masang Pilipino, added: “Besides the matter of midnight appointments, there is the more important issue concerning our international reputation, that it seems we have no respect for international protocol and the terms of service of foreign service officers.”

But Malacañang Saturday denied that there was anything irregular about the removal of Albert.

“No, it wasn’t hasty,” Gary Olivar, a deputy spokesperson of Ms Arroyo, said without elaborating.

Either-or

Lozada said the removal could either mean that Albert “did something wrong,” or that Germany might have done something that did not sit well with Manila.

“Domestically, it’s OK for us to change our people,” he said. “But in the international community where we are a small player, it’s not.”

On top of the 60-day recall notice, Lozada said an envoy who was about to be relieved was usually told about it 30 days in advance.

The senior DFA official noted that “it’s not the practice of the DFA to dispatch an ambassador until two things have occurred.”

Like Bataclan, he pointed out that a new envoy first had to be cleared by the CA and accepted by the foreign government.

He said both requirements were missing in the case of Yuchengco’s appointment, which he described as “problematic at this time.”

But when asked if the new president could end up settling the matter of Yuchengco’s appointment, he said: “That’s a possibility.”

Still, the official said Albert was not exactly irreplaceable.

“She is a political appointee because she is way past the retirement age,” the official said.

“She serves at the pleasure of the President and she is recallable at any time. As a general proposition, political appointees, like Cabinet members, are coterminous with the appointing authority. So she can only stay there, at most, up to June 30.”
http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/inquirerheadlines/nation/view/20100328-261201/Relief-of-RP-envoy-to-Germany-stirs-rage
 
#98 ·
DFA's stance on naming of new RP envoy to Germany bared
MANILA, March 28 (PNA) -- Press Secretary Crispulo Icban Jr. today releases the official statements from the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) on the issue of new appointment to the Philippine ambassadorial post in Germany:

Ambassador to Germany Delia Domingo Albert retired in 2005 and has since been annually extended as a political appointee recallable at any time, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said today in the wake of reports asking why she has now been recalled and a new ambassador, Al Yuchenco, named in her place.

Assistant Secretary Eduardo Malaya, spokesman of the DFA, said Albert ceased to be a career ambassador when she retired in 2005. Her term was immediately extended at that time and this has been done annually, but as a political appointee, she serves at the pleasure of the President.

"Political ambassadors are recallable any time and we in the career service know that," Malaya said.

The DFA issued the clarification in the wake of reports quoting an unnamed DFA official as saying that the recall of a "career ambassador" had sent shock waves within the DFA.

Executive Secretary Leandro Mendoza said President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo has never removed career officials unless they were promoted. She has never violated the Civil Service Law, he said.

He said that he had duly informed Albert of the appointment of Yuchengco but she was to remain at her post pending the completion of the two requirements of such ambassadorial appointments - the concurrence of the host government, in this case, Germany, and confirmation by the Commission on Appointments.

With respect to the ratio between career and political appointees in the DFA, Malaya said that the DFA last October issued a statement that the Arroyo administration had appointed more career ambassadors and consuls general (72.83 percent) than political ones. This compares with 70 percent for the Estrada administration and 67 percent for the Ramos administration.

Former Civil Service Commission Chairman Patricia Sto. Tomas said that in President Arroyo's more recent appointments in the government service, the percentage of career vs political appointments had been 93.7 percent.

DFA also said that four of the most recent vacancies in the foreign service, namely, Brussels, Pretoria, Islamabad, and Hanoi, were filled with career diplomats, whose appointments were approved by the Commission on Appointments on Oct. 14, 2009.' (PNA)
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=0&nid=1&rid=266850
 
#99 ·
PGMA names Cabactulan as new envoy to UN
MANILA, March 29 (PNA) — President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo has appointed Ambassador Libran Cabactulan as the new permanent representative to the United Nations (UN), replacing resigned Ambassador Hilario Davide Sr.

Executive Secretary Leandro Mendoza said in a media briefing at Malacanang on Monday that Davide resigned in the first week of March to help his son who is running for the gubernatorial post in Cebu province.

Cabactulan is assigned at the Office of the Secretary of Foreign Affairs as senior assistant for Nuclear Disarmament and Non-Proliferation with a rank of Assistant Secretary. (PNA)
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=0&nid=1&rid=267058
 
#100 ·
Ambassadors to Belgium, Pakistan present credentials
MANILA, March 29 (PNA)—The newly-accredited Philippine ambassador to Brussels has relayed to the Belgian King Manila’s support of Brussels when the latter assumes the Presidency of the European Union in the second half of the year, the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) said today.

The new ambassador, former DFA Undersecretary for Policy Enrique A. Manalo, also conveyed the best wishes of President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo with King Albert II at the Royal Laeken Castle in Brussels after presenting his credentials on March 17.

They also talked about the plans of the Philippines for the forthcoming Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM) in Brussels in October 2010, as well as recalled memories of the Belgian monarch’s visit to Manila in the 1980’s when he was still Crown Prince.

Manalo’s presentation of his credentials to Belgium and that of former Assistant Secretary of the Office of Legal Affairs Jesus I. Yabes to Pakistan were announced belatedly today by the DFA.

Yabes presented his accreditation to Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari on Feb. 22 at the Aiwan-e-Sadr (Presidency) in Islamabad.

Both Manalo and Yabes are career diplomats.

DFA said that the Belgian king expressed his support for strengthening the bilateral relations between the Philippines and Belgium.

They discussed the embassy’s plans to enhance Philippines-Belgium ties especially in trade, investment, cultural promotion and people-to-people contacts.

The King also recalled his visit to Manila in the 1980s when he was still the Crown Prince, and his contribution towards the realization of the Light Rail Transit (LRT) system. Manalo told the King that the LRT has become an integral part of Manila’s transport system.

Ambassador Yabes had a brief conversation with President Zardari during which the latter acknowledged the excellent state of relations between the Philippines and Pakistan.

DFA said Yabes pledged to work for the enhancement of the bilateral relations.

At the end of the meeting, Zardari presented Yabes with the late Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto's book, “Reconciliation.” Zardari is Bhutto’s widower.

Manalo served as Undersecretary for Policy (2007-2010) before his posting to Belgium. He also served as Ambassador and Permanent Representative to the Philippine Mission to the United Nations in Geneva (2003-2007). He was Ambassador and Deputy Permanent Representative to the United Nations in New York (2000-2003) and Assistant Secretary, Office of European Affairs (1998-2000), among others.

Yabes served as Assistant Secretary of the Office of Legal Affairs prior to his posting. He was also Assistant Secretary of the Office of Middle East and African Affairs (2008), Philippine Consul General to Shanghai (2002-2007), Philippine Ambassador to Singapore (1992-2002); Deputy Chief of Mission, Minister and Consul General to Tokyo (1996-1999), among others. (PNA)
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=0&nid=12&rid=267091
 
#111 ·
"Magandang gabi," new US envoy greets Filipinos at NAIA

The United States’ new ambassador to the Philippines, Harry Thomas Jr., arrived in Manila on Saturday night and tried his Tagalog on welcomers, greeting them with, “Magandang gabi sa inyong lahat (Good evening to all of you).”

“I am delighted to be here to take up my responsibility as ambassador,” Thomas said in brief remarks at the Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA).

Rebecca Thompson, the US embassy’s press attaché, said Thomas would be presenting his credentials to Foreign Secretary Alberto Romulo on Monday.

The envoy cited the strong ties between the two countries. “We are great friends and we have much to do together. I look forward to working with the people of the Philippines,” he said.

He touched on what his father, Harry Sr., had to say about the Philippines after the latter’s stay here at the end of World War II.

“My father always told me what a great time he had with the people of the Philippines. I hope I can live up to the work he and his colleagues did here,” he said.

Linguist

According to a US Embassy statement, Thomas, who is fluent in Spanish, Hindi and Bengali, is learning Tagalog. He ended his arrival speech at the NAIA with, “Maraming, maraming salamat sa inyong lahat (Many, many thanks to all of you).”

Thomas, 53, is the first African-American ambassador to the Philippines. He succeeded Kristie Kenney, the first woman US ambassador to the Philippines.

Thomas served most recently as director general of the foreign service and director for human resources of the US Department of State.

He served as a special assistant to former Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and later as executive secretary of the state department.

Thomas joined the foreign service in 1984. He was the US ambassador to Bangladesh from 2003 to 2005. He also served in the White House as director for South Asia in the National Security Council from 2001 to 2002.

Briefed Bush

He was also posted in India, Zimbabwe, Nigeria and Peru.

While serving in the White House in 2001, Thomas briefed President George W. Bush as the US was negotiating to keep India
and Pakistan from going to war.

In 2006, Thomas headed a task force that evacuated 15,000 US citizens from Lebanon at the height of clashes between Israeli troops and Hezbollah militants.

Born in New York City’s Harlem district on June 3, 1956, Thomas is a graduate of the Jesuit-run College of the Holy Cross in Massachusetts. He pursued further studies at Columbia University in New York.

He and his wife Ericka Ovette, a jazz singer, have a daughter, Casey Marie.
 
#113 ·
^^ They could've save themselves the embarrassment by naming it "Passport Registration Center." Assuming that they also know how to spell "registration" correctly. :lol:
 
#114 ·
New U.S. ambassador to Manila pays courtesies at DFA
MANILA, April `12 (PNA)—The newly-designated U.S. Ambassador to the Philippines Harry K. Thomas, Jr. paid a a courtesy call on Acting Foreign Affairs Secretary Esteban B. Conejos, Jr. at the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), Monday afternoon.

The DFA said Conejos and Thomas had “a cordial and pleasant exchange on a range of subjects,” but did not specify.

Thomas will assume his post at the U.S. embassy after presenting his credentials as Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary to Presidnt Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo, who happens to be in Washington.

In a statement on his arrival on Saturday, and issued by the U.S. embassy today, Thomas reiterated the long-standing special relations between America and the Philippines “as treaty partners…great friends, and we have much to do together.”

”I look forward to working with the people of the Philippines and the people of America and to learn a lot about each other,” he said.

Thomas said that his father had been in the Philippines after World War II and had a great time with Filipinos. “I hope that I can live up to the work that he and his colleagues did here on behalf of the Philippines."

Thomas previously served as ambassador to Bangladesh, and replaced Kristie Kenney in Manila.
http://www.pna.gov.ph/index.php?idn=0&nid=1&rid=269382
 
#117 ·
New online US visa application process for Philippines
May 17 2010 by Liam Clifford

Anyone from the Philippines who hopes to travel to the US on a US visa can now apply online through the new DS-160 form.

Applications for a non-immigrant US visa can now be made online, said a statement from the US embassy in Manila. The statement read: 'The new on-line application form replaces three paper forms, so it should be easier and faster for clients to complete their applications.'

The online form allows people to complete part of their application online, save the information they have entered and complete the rest of the form later on. Entered information can also be used again or a later application.

The US embassy said that the new form, as well as being more convenient and quicker, is more environmentally friendly as it cuts down on paperwork. The press statement added further explanation of what the form involves: 'the new form has two key changes. The DS-160 form is submitted electronically, through the Internet, replacing paper forms. Also, the online form requires applicants to upload a digital photograph from the computers they use to complete the application.'
 
#118 ·
US visa fees to increase on June 4
abs-cbnNEWS.com
Posted at 05/25/2010 1:33 PM | Updated as of 05/25/2010 1:33 PM

MANILA, Philippines – The fees for the processing of US visas will increase on June 4, 2010, the US Department of State announced.

“The US embassy in Manila will immediately begin collecting the new fees for appointments made for June 4 or later,” the US Department of State said.

The department said the increase for the Machine Readable Visa (MRV) will ensure sufficient resources to meet the increasing cost of processing non-immigrant visas.

It added that the new fee for tourist/business visas (B1/B2 category), seafarer/crew visas (C1/D), student visas (F), and exchange visitor visas (J) will be $140 or the equivalent in pesos. The new MRV fee for work visas (H, L, O, P, Q, and R categories) will be $150. Trader/investor visas (E) will rise to $390. Fiancé/Spouse (K) visas will be $350. All other non-immigrant categories will be $140.

Applicants with appointment interview dates on or after June 4 will be required to pay the new fees. Those who are scheduled before June 4 will pay visa fees at the current rate of $131.

All applicants with an interview date of June 4 or later must pay the full MRV fee, even if they have already made an appointment and paid at the old rate of $131.

“The embassy requests that visa applicants who have already paid the MRV fee of $131 for an appointment scheduled after June 4 pay for the difference in fees at the same bank branch where they made the initial $131 payment,” it stated.

It further stated that applicants will not be allowed to enter the embassy for their scheduled interview unless the full MRV fee has been paid.
 
#123 ·
Manolo Lopez is next Philippine ambassador to Japan
MANILA, Philippines - Manuel "Manolo" Lopez will be the next Philippine ambassador to Japan replacing Domingo Siazon.

Official sources confirmed to abs-cbnNEWS.com that President Benigno Aquino would name Lopez, former head of the country's largest power distributor, Manila Electric Co. (Meralco), as the country's next ambassador to Japan.

Lopez is chairman and chief executive officer of Lopez Holdings Corp. (formerly Benpres Holdings Corp.), holding firm of Lopez family companies such as ABS-CBN, First Pacific Holdings Corp., Bayan Telecommunications Holdings Corp..

The Philippine Daily Inquirer reported on Sunday that President Aquino has named Lopez ambassador to Japan, and Merceditas Arrastia-Tuason as ambassador to the Vatican.

"Lopez, one of five ambassadors that Mr. Aquino said he has chosen for various foreign missions, is a key political supporter of Mr. Aquino," the Inquirer said.

Tuason was a "close friend" of the late former President Cory Aquino, the PDI said.

Siazon was named ambassador to Japan in 1993 by President Fidel Ramos. He became foreign secretary in 1995 after the resignation of Roberto Romulo following the diplomatic row over the Flor Contemplacion case.

Former President Gloria Arroyo reappointed him to Tokyo after Joseph Estrada was ousted from office. Siazon served as Estrada's foreign affairs secretary.
http://www.abs-cbnnews.com/nation/10/10/10/manolo-lopez-next-philippine-ambassador-japan
 
#129 ·
CONSULATES IN THE PHILIPPINES
Code:
[B][U]Located in MANILA[/U][/B]
[I]Benin
Burkina Faso[/I]
Jamaica
[I]Jordan
Poland[/I]
Tanzania
Tunisia

[I][B][U]Located in ANGELES CITY[/U][/B]
Eritrea
Romania[/I]

[I][B][U]Located in CALOOCAN CITY[/U][/B]
Slovakia[/I]

[B][U]Located in CEBU CITY[/U][/B]
Austria
Canada
[I]Chile[/I]
China
[I]Czech Republic
Denmark
France
Germany
Israel[/I]
Japan
[I]Korea, South
Mexico[/I]
Netherlands
[I]Norway
Poland
Portugal
Romania
Russia
Slovakia[/I]
Thailand
Turkey
[I]United Kingdom[/I]
United States

[B][U]Located in DAVAO CITY[/U][/B]
Czech Republic
Indonesia
Japan
Malaysia
[I]Palau[/I]

[I][B][U]Located in GENERAL SANTOS CITY[/U][/B]
Papua New Guinea[/I]

[B][U]Located in LAOAG CITY[/U][/B]
China

[B][U]Located in MANDALUYONG CITY[/U][/B]
Peru
Slovenia

[B][U]Located in MAKATI CITY[/U][/B]
[I]Bolivia
Bulgaria[/I]
Costa Rica
[I]Cote d'Ivoire[/I]
Croatia
Denmark
[I]Dominican Republic[/I]
Ecuador
[I]Eritrea
Finland
Gambia
Ghana
Greece
Grenada
Guinea
Haiti
Hungary[/I]
Iceland
Ireland
[I]Kenya
Monaco
Morocco
Nepal
Oman
Palestinian Authority
Panama
San Marino
Serbia
Syria
Taiwan (Republic of China)*
Togo[/I]
Ukraine
Uruguay
Vanuatu

[B][U]Located in MUNTINLUPA CITY[/U][/B]
[I]Lebanon
Micronesia[/I]

[I][B][U]Located in OLONGAPO CITY[/U][/B]
Estonia
Lithuania
Papua New Guinea[/I]

[I][B][U]Located in PARAÑAQUE CITY[/U][/B]
Gabon[/I]

[B][U]Located in PASAY CITY[/U][/B]
[I]Estonia[/I]
Latvia
[I]Maldives
Tonga[/I]

[B][U]Located in PASIG CITY[/U][/B]
[I]El Salvador
Honduras
Lithuania
Mali[/I]
Malta
Marshall Islands
[I]Nicaragua
Seychelles
Timor Leste
Tuvalu[/I]

[B][U]Located in QUEZON CITY[/U][/B]
Cyprus
[I]Djibouti
Guatemala
Zambia[/I]

[I][B][U]Located in SAN JUAN CITY[/U][/B]
Kiribati[/I]

[B][U]Located in TAGUIG CITY[/U][/B]
Senegal
[I]Paraguay[/I]

[I][B][U]Located in ZAMBOANGA CITY[/U][/B]
Spain[/I]

*Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in the Philippines, 
de facto embassy of the Republic of China.
Updated List as of October, 2011. New consulates or new location of consulates italicized. :eek:kay:
 
#134 ·
Sweden now has a consulate in Makati. The Swedish Embassy closed down years back and now, The Swedish Embassy in Bangkok is now handling Philippine affairs.

Though I think it sucks since it is a major country and there are some Swedish investments in this country plus the number of Swedish tourists.
 
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