Foreign relations of Vanuatu

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Vanuatu maintains diplomatic relations with many countries, and it has a small network of diplomatic missions. Australia, France, Japan, New Zealand, the People's Republic of China, South Korea and the United Kingdom maintain embassies, High Commissions, or missions in Port Vila. The British High Commission maintained a continued presence for almost a century, though closed from 2005 until reopening in 2019. [1]

Contents

The government's main concern has been to bolster the economy. In keeping with its need for financial assistance, Vanuatu has joined the Asian Development Bank, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund (IMF). According to ABC Radio Australia, "Foreign policy issues that feature in Vanuatu include wide support for the Free West Papua Movement and broadly for independence throughout Melanesia, the One China Policy and relations with Australia and New Zealand." On the latter topic, guest worker programmes feature prominently. [2]

History

1980s: the Lini policies

Vanuatu (formerly the New Hebrides) obtained independence from France and the United Kingdom in 1980. The country's first elected leader, Prime Minister Father Walter Lini, governed Vanuatu from 1980 to 1991, and shaped its initial foreign policy in distinct ways. The key bases of Lini's foreign policy were non-alignment and anti-colonialism, support for independence movements around the world - from faraway Western Sahara to neighbouring New Caledonia, as well as East Timor and West Papua, who all received Vanuatu's support at the United Nations. [3]

Vanuatu notably angered Indonesia by allowing the Free Papua Movement to open an office in Port-Vila. Vanuatu in the 1980s was the only country in Oceania not to align with the Western bloc in the dying stages of the Cold War. Rejecting support either for the West or for the East, Vanuatu joined the Non-Aligned Movement in 1983, and only established diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union and the United States in June and September 1986, respectively. [3]

In keeping with this policy, Vanuatu established diplomatic relations with Cuba in 1983, and with Libya in 1986. Lini openly condemned the 1986 bombing of Libya by the United States, sending a message of condoleances to Colonel Muammar Gaddafi, while Barak Sopé accused the United States of being a State sponsor of terrorism. The same accusation was levelled by Vanuatu against France after the sinking of the Rainbow Warrior . Relations with the United States were tense until the late 1980s, when a State visit to Washington by Lini and Foreign Affairs Minister Sela Molisa contributed to a lessening of tensions. Relations with France remained strained throughout the 1980s for a variety of reasons. [4]

Lini's government opposed French nuclear tests at Mururoa, and spoke out repeatedly against apartheid in South Africa. Vanuatu was a member of the United Nations Special Committee against Apartheid. In 1990, Vanuatu's ambassador to the United Nations Robert Van Lierop remarked proudly: "I think that Vanuatu's contribution to the United Nations is somewhat disproportionate in relation to its size. [...] When the Prime Minister met Nelson Mandela in Namibia, Mandela knew about Vanuatu because it has always been among the countries in the region that have most clearly spoken out on the problem of apartheid". [5]

Vanuatu under Walter Lini also sought to create solid relations with Asia, and, by the end of the decade, had established official diplomatic relations with the People's Republic of China, Japan, South Korea, North Korea, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Vietnam and the Philippines. [6]

1990s: the Carlot Korman and Vohor years

Following the 1991 general election, the francophone Union of Moderate Parties became the dominant party in Parliament, and Maxime Carlot Korman became the country's first francophone Prime Minister. He "reversed [the country's] unequivocal support for the Kanak National Liberation Front in New Caledonia, its systematic enmity towards France, its flirting with radical regimes, and its openly anti-American nuclear-free Pacific stance." Francophones held power, under Carlot Korman or Serge Vohor, until 1998. [7]

Foreign policy issues

Aid

Since 1980, Australia, the United Kingdom, France, and New Zealand have provided the bulk of Vanuatu's development aid. As of March 2008, Australia was Vanuatu's biggest aid provider, followed by France. [8] A number of other countries, including Japan, Canada, Germany, and various multilateral organizations, such as the Economic and Social Council for Asia and the Pacific, the UN Development Programme, the Asian Development Bank, the European Economic Community, and the Commonwealth Development Corporation also provide developmental aid. The United States, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom, South Korea and Japan also send volunteers. Since the mid-2000s, Cuba has been a noted provider of medical aid.

Support to the right of self-determination

Vanuatu continues to promote the right to self-determination. In 1980s SADR and Palestine was recognized.[ citation needed ] Later, Vanuatu recognized Kosovo in 2010 and Abkhazia in 2011.[ citation needed ] Vanuatu is the only country in the world that recognizes all four of these states.[ time needed ] In addition, Vanuatu strongly supports the Free Papua Movement and its program of self-determination of West Papua, a region in Indonesia, in the midst of Papua conflict. Vanuatu's bringing up the issue at international forums has brought sharp rebukes from Indonesia; according to its diplomats, "it is shameful that [Vanuatu has an] excessive and unhealthy obsession about how Indonesia should govern itself" and states that Vanuatu is "not a representation of the people of Papua, and stop fantasising of being one." [9]

Wantok Blong Yumi Bill

In June 2010, the Parliament of Vanuatu unanimously gave its support to a motion – the Wantok Blong Yumi Bill – clarifying Vanuatu's foreign policy with regards to West Papuan independence claims from Indonesia. The bill, tabled by Independent MP Ralph Regenvanu and supported by Prime Minister Edward Natapei and opposition leader Maxime Carlot Korman, committed Vanuatu to recognising West Papua's independence; to seeking observer status for West Papua in the Melanesian Spearhead Group and in the Pacific Islands Forum; and to "request[ing] [United Nations] General Assembly support for the International Court of Justice to provide an advisory opinion on the process in which the former Dutch New Guinea was ceded to Indonesia in the 1960s". [10] [11] [12]

International organizational participation

Regional relations

Vanuatu maintains strong regional ties in the Pacific. It is a full member of the Pacific Islands Forum, the South Pacific Applied Geoscience Commission, the South Pacific Tourism Organisation, the Pacific Regional Environment Programme and the Secretariat of the Pacific Community. Vanuatu is one of the eight signatories of the Nauru Agreement Concerning Cooperation in the Management of Fisheries of Common Interest which collectively controls 25-30% of the world's tuna supply and approximately 60% of the western and central Pacific tuna supply. [13] Vanuatu endorsed the Treaty of Rarotonga (the South Pacific Nuclear Free Zone Treaty) in 1995. [14]

Vanuatu has been a member of The Forum of Small States (FOSS) since the group's founding in 1992. [15]

Extra-regional organizational relations

Vanuatu has been a member of the Organisation internationale de la Francophonie since 1979 (the year before it gained independence from France). Vanuatu was admitted to the Commonwealth of Nations in 1980 and to the United Nations in 1981. Vanuatu is currently the only Pacific nation that belongs to the Non-Aligned Movement,

Additionally outside the region, Vanuatu is a member or participant of the ACP (Lomé Convention), the Alliance of Small Island States, Asian Development Bank, Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP), the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), the G-77, the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the International Civil Aviation Organization, the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement, the International Development Association, the International Finance Corporation, the IMF, the International Maritime Organization, the International Olympic Committee, the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), the Universal Postal Union and the World Meteorological Organization. Vanuatu became a member of the WTO in 2012. Vanuatu is also a non-signatory user of Intelsat.

Vanuatu became a member of Interpol in 2018 and is currently a suspended member of the International Hydrographic Organization - since 2019.

On 4 December 2020, Vanuatu became the sixth ever nation to graduate from the United Nations official list of Least Developed Countries (LDC). After meeting graduation thresholds in the Human Assets Index and income in 2006, 2009 and 2012, the UN Committee for Development Policy recommended graduation. The UN Economic and Social Council and UN General Assembly approved of the recommendation in 2012 and 2013, but after Cyclone Pam Vanuatu was granted an extension until 2020. The country lost exclusive access to certain international support measures such as in the areas of development assistance and trade. [16]

Countries with diplomatic relations

List of countries with which Vanuatu has diplomatic relations with:

Diplomatic relations of Vanuatu.svg
#CountryDate [17] [18]
1Flag of France.svg  France 30 July 1980
2Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom 30 July 1980
3Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia 30 July 1980
4Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand 30 July 1980
5Flag of Canada (Pantone).svg  Canada 30 July 1980
6Flag of Fiji.svg  Fiji 30 July 1980
7Flag of the Solomon Islands.svg  Solomon Islands 30 July 1980
8Flag of Papua New Guinea.svg  Papua New Guinea 30 July 1980
9Flag of Kiribati.svg  Kiribati 30 July 1980
10Flag of Nauru.svg  Nauru 30 July 1980
11Flag of Tonga.svg  Tonga 30 July 1980
12Flag of Samoa.svg  Samoa 30 July 1980
Flag of the Cook Islands.svg  Cook Islands 30 July 1980
13Flag of South Korea.svg  South Korea 5 November 1980 [19]
14Flag of Japan.svg  Japan 8 January 1981 [20]
15Flag of Germany.svg  Germany 22 April 1981
16Flag of Spain.svg  Spain 30 April 1981
17Flag of Belgium (civil).svg  Belgium 10 June 1981
18Flag of Sweden.svg  Sweden 27 September 1981
19Flag of North Korea.svg  North Korea 1 October 1981
20Flag of Cameroon.svg  Cameroon 1 November 1981
21Flag of Vietnam.svg  Vietnam 3 March 1982
22Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Netherlands 9 March 1982
23Flag of Nigeria.svg  Nigeria 16 March 1982
24Flag of Italy.svg  Italy 23 March 1982
25Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China 26 March 1982
26Flag of India.svg  India 13 April 1982
27Flag of Switzerland (Pantone).svg   Switzerland 5 May 1982
28Flag of Thailand.svg  Thailand 2 November 1982
29Flag of Singapore.svg  Singapore 10 December 1982
30Flag of Cuba.svg  Cuba 11 March 1983
31Flag of Malaysia.svg  Malaysia 5 April 1983
32Flag of Bangladesh.svg  Bangladesh 10 May 1983
33Flag of Sri Lanka.svg  Sri Lanka 28 September 1983
34Flag of Portugal.svg  Portugal 30 September 1983
35Flag of Greece.svg  Greece 1 June 1984
36Flag of Peru.svg  Peru 30 May 1986
37Flag of Libya.svg  Libya 30 May 1986
38Flag of Nicaragua.svg  Nicaragua 6 June 1986
39Flag of Russia.svg  Russia 30 June 1986
40Flag of Cote d'Ivoire.svg  Ivory Coast 11 July 1986
41Flag of Seychelles.svg  Seychelles 15 July 1986
42Flag of Algeria.svg  Algeria 15 July 1986
43Flag of Angola.svg  Angola 16 July 1986
44Flag of Zimbabwe.svg  Zimbabwe 15 August 1986
45Flag of Mozambique.svg  Mozambique 6 September 1986
46Flag of the United States.svg  United States 30 September 1986
47Flag of the Philippines.svg  Philippines 8 October 1986
48Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico 30 October 1986
49Flag of Poland.svg  Poland 15 November 1986
50Flag of Tanzania.svg  Tanzania 18 December 1986
51Flag of Brazil.svg  Brazil 22 December 1986
52Flag of Austria.svg  Austria 29 December 1986
53Flag of Togo (3-2).svg  Togo 21 January 1987
54Flag of Myanmar.svg  Myanmar 28 January 1987
55Flag of Laos.svg  Laos 18 February 1987
56Flag of Argentina.svg  Argentina 13 March 1987 [21]
57Flag of Finland.svg  Finland 1 April 1987
58Flag of Jamaica.svg  Jamaica 23 July 1987
59Flag of Maldives.svg  Maldives 27 January 1988
60Flag of the Bahamas.svg  Bahamas 27 January 1988
61Flag of Botswana.svg  Botswana 1 November 1988
62Flag of Tunisia.svg  Tunisia 1 November 1988
Flag of Palestine.svg  State of Palestine 17 October 1989 [22]
63Flag of Namibia.svg  Namibia 23 March 1990
64Flag of the Federated States of Micronesia.svg  Federated States of Micronesia 19 April 1990
65Flag of the Marshall Islands.svg  Marshall Islands 1 August 1990
66Flag of Chile.svg  Chile 10 September 1990
67Flag of Israel.svg  Israel 16 September 1993
Flag of the Vatican City - 2001 version.svg  Holy See 20 July 1994
68Flag of Indonesia.svg  Indonesia 3 July 1995
69Flag of Turkey.svg  Turkey 14 July 1995 [23]
70Flag of Cambodia.svg  Cambodia 26 September 1996
71Flag of South Africa.svg  South Africa 6 July 1999
72Flag of Ukraine.svg  Ukraine 29 September 1999
73Flag of Croatia.svg  Croatia 18 April 2000
74Flag of Ireland.svg  Ireland 7 September 2000
75Flag of Morocco.svg  Morocco 14 December 2000
76Flag of Mauritius.svg  Mauritius 13 August 2001
77Flag of North Macedonia.svg  North Macedonia 16 November 2001
78Flag of East Timor.svg  East Timor 21 August 2002
79Flag of Qatar.svg  Qatar 16 September 2002
80Flag of the Czech Republic.svg  Czech Republic 12 December 2002
81Flag of Iceland.svg  Iceland 27 September 2004
82Flag of Malta.svg  Malta 29 September 2004
83Flag of Nepal.svg    Nepal 19 September 2006
Flag of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic.svg  Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic 31 July 2008
84Flag of the United Arab Emirates.svg  United Arab Emirates 23 June 2009
85Flag of Uruguay.svg  Uruguay 6 August 2009
86Flag of Trinidad and Tobago.svg  Trinidad and Tobago 24 November 2009
87Flag of Luxembourg.svg  Luxembourg 24 September 2010
88Flag of Hungary.svg  Hungary 6 June 2011
89Flag of Egypt.svg  Egypt 22 September 2011
90Flag of Kuwait.svg  Kuwait 8 November 2012
91Flag of Georgia.svg  Georgia 12 July 2013
92Flag of Mongolia.svg  Mongolia 23 September 2013
93Flag of Montenegro.svg  Montenegro 25 September 2013
94Flag of Estonia.svg  Estonia 25 September 2013
95Flag of Armenia.svg  Armenia 26 September 2013
96Flag of Kazakhstan.svg  Kazakhstan 19 February 2014
Flag of Kosovo.svg  Kosovo 19 May 2014 [24]
97Flag of Latvia.svg  Latvia 7 April 2015 [25]
98Flag of Slovenia.svg  Slovenia 17 June 2015 [26]
99Flag of Lithuania.svg  Lithuania 28 September 2015
100Flag of Pakistan.svg  Pakistan 8 August 2016
101Flag of Venezuela.svg  Venezuela 18 September 2016
102Flag of Azerbaijan.svg  Azerbaijan 22 September 2017
103Flag of Norway.svg  Norway 28 May 2018
104Flag of Romania.svg  Romania 31 May 2018
105Flag of Tajikistan.svg  Tajikistan 16 August 2018
106Flag of Serbia.svg  Serbia 28 August 2018
107Flag of Monaco.svg  Monaco 10 September 2018
108Flag of San Marino.svg  San Marino 25 September 2018
109Flag of Bosnia and Herzegovina.svg  Bosnia and Herzegovina 26 September 2018
110Flag of Ecuador.svg  Ecuador 26 September 2018
111Flag of Costa Rica.svg  Costa Rica 28 September 2018
112Flag of Rwanda.svg  Rwanda 3 October 2018
113Flag of Denmark.svg  Denmark 23 October 2018
114Flag of Bulgaria.svg  Bulgaria 24 June 2019
115Flag of Lebanon.svg  Lebanon 25 September 2019 [27]
116Flag of Kyrgyzstan.svg  Kyrgyzstan 26 September 2019
117Flag of Burundi.svg  Burundi 6 December 2019 [28]
118Flag of Dominica.svg  Dominica 20 September 2021
119Flag of Tuvalu.svg  Tuvalu 12 July 2022 [29]
120Flag of Saudi Arabia.svg  Saudi Arabia 8 August 2022
121Flag of the Dominican Republic.svg  Dominican Republic 14 November 2023
122Flag of Oman.svg  Oman 17 November 2023 [30]
123Flag of Panama.svg  Panama 21 November 2023
124Flag of Andorra.svg  Andorra 30 November 2023
125Flag of Bahrain.svg  Bahrain 9 February 2024
126Flag of Guatemala.svg  Guatemala 4 October 2024 [31]
127Flag of Cyprus.svg  Cyprus Unknown (before October 2006) [32]

Bilateral relations

CountryNotes
Flag of the Republic of Abkhazia.svg  Abkhazia

On 23 May 2011, Vanuatu became the fifth UN member state (after Russia, Nicaragua, Venezuela and Nauru) to recognise Abkhazia. On this day joint statement on establishment of diplomatic relations was signed. [33] At the same time of signing a visa-free travel regime between the two countries was established. [34] [35] Foreign Affairs Minister Alfred Carlot said that "Vanuatu's foreign policy aims at eradicating colonialism from the face of the earth." In a press release, Carlot stated: "Vanuatu is neutral; our recognition of Abkhazia does not in any way mean that we cannot have diplomatic relations with the Republic of Georgia." [36] [37]

The following month, however, the Vanuatuan government of Prime Minister Sato Kilman was voided by the Supreme Court of Vanuatu, on the grounds that Kilman's election in December 2010 had not conformed to constitutional requirements. Former Prime Minister Edward Natapei became interim prime minister until a new leader could be elected. Natapei promptly withdrew Vanuatu's recognition of Abkhazia, arguing that it had been granted by an illegitimate government, and announced that he would seek to establish diplomatic relations with Georgia, recognising its sovereignty over Abkhazia. [38]

On 26 June 2011, Sato Kilman was re-elected Prime Minister [39] and on 12 July 2011 Vanuatu's Foreign Minister Alfred Carlot re-confirmed Vanuatu's recognition of Abkhazia. [40] On 12 July 2011 the Ambassador of Abkhazia in the Asia-Pacific region Juris Gulbis stated, that Abkhazia and Vanuatu plans to sign a framework agreement on cooperation in the field of culture, trade and banking sector. According to him, the Government of Vanuatu twice confirmed the establishment of diplomatic relations with Abkhazia and of their intention to contribute to the development of friendly ties between the two States. [41] In 2013, Vanuatu established diplomatic relations with Georgia and recognized Abkhazia as a part of that country.

Flag of Armenia.svg  Armenia

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 26 September 2013. [42]

The Prime Minister of the Republic of Vanuatu Charlot Salwai, who visited Armenia on his official visit for the XVII Francophone Summit, gave a visit to the Armenian Genocide Memorial Complex with the accompaniment of Aramayis Grigoryan, the Deputy Minister of Diaspora of the RA.

The ni-Vanuatu visitors were welcomed by Harutyun Marutyan, the director of the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute, who, in his turn, gave a brief introduction to the notable people who previously have visited the complex and the history, as well as the symbolism, of the complex.

The Prime Minister of Vanuatu laid a wreath at the Memorial and put flowers at the "eternal fire" which is lit to honour the memory of the innocent victims of the Armenian genocide, with the accompaniment of the delegation. Furthermore, the delegation made a tour around the Memory Wall, got familiar with its meaning and significance.

The delegation also visited the Armenian Genocide Museum alongside the Complex and, at the end of their tour, Prime Minister Salwai left a note in the Memory Book of the museum: "In commemoration of the disappeared people of the Armenian Genocide... I express my deep sorrow to the children of the Armenian nation. Let God bless Armenia".

The Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute director Harutyun Marutyan awarded the Prime Minister of Vanuatu the Aurora Mardiganyan medal, and the book "Armenian Genocide: Front page Coverage in the World Press". [43]

Flag of Australia (converted).svg  Australia

Australia and Vanuatu have very strong ties. Australia has provided the bulk of Vanuatu's military assistance, training its paramilitary mobile force and also providing patrol boats to patrol Vanuatu's waters. In 1983, Vanuatu and Australia entered into a Defence Cooperation Program together. As part of this program, two Royal Australian Navy advisers are stationed in Vanuatu Australia to assist Vanuatu in maintaining and operating the RVS Tukoro, the Pacific class patrol boat donated to Vanuatu by Australia in 1987. The RVS Tukoro is Vanuatu's primarily maritime police vessel. Australia also provides assistance to the Mobile Force element of the Vanuatu Police Force (VPF), as well as providing support to exercises and infrastructure projects. [44]

Australia is Vanuatu's largest source of foreign direct investment, mostly directed in the areas of tourist development, agriculture and construction. Australia is Vanuatu's largest source of tourists, with Australians making up 2/3 of all long-term tourist visitors and virtually all cruise ship visits. Since 2008, Vanuatu (along with Tonga, Kiribati and Papua New Guinea) has sent seasonal workers to Australia through the Australian government-funded Pacific Seasonal Workers Pilot Scheme (PSWPS). [44]

Additionally, Australia is Vanuatu's main source of foreign aid, with the Australian providing A$66 million(US$70.4 million) in 2010–11. [44] In 2004, Australia threatened to cut its aid to Vanuatu when then-Prime Minister Serge Vohor reappointed officials who had been dismissed after being charged with criminal activity. [45] Vanuatu agreed to Australian demands for more transparent government and anti-corruption steps. The result was that from 2005 to 2010, Australian aid was governed through the Australia–Vanuatu Joint Development Cooperation Strategy.

This was superseded with the signing in May 2009 of the Australia-Vanuatu Partnership for Development. The central focus of the Partnership is for Australia to assist Vanuatu in achieving its UN Millennium Development Goals (MDG's). The priorities stated in the Partnership are to •support increased access and quality of education for boys and girls and equip them with relevant skills and knowledge •strengthen health services and accelerate progress towards health MDGs •develop essential infrastructure to support economic growth and service delivery •progress reform on economic governance •address equality of opportunity for all men and women and include the needs and priorities of people with disability in development activities [46] (full text of Partnership agreement)

Flag of the People's Republic of China.svg  China See China–Vanuatu relations

China established an embassy in Vanuatu in 1989, while Vanuatu established an honorary consulate in China in 1999; it officially became an embassy in 2005. [47]

Vanuatu briefly recognized the Republic of China (Taiwan) in late 2004 when on 3 November Prime Minister Serge Vohor signed a communiqué in Taipei with ROC Foreign Minister Mark Chen. Taipei had offered $30 million in aid in return (compared with the $10 million given by the PRC). Under the One-China policy, this would result in the severing of ties with the People's Republic of China. Vohor did so without consultations with his cabinet and the PRC Foreign Ministry, quoting the Vanuatu Foreign Minister, denied ties with the ROC had been established.

The Vanuatu Council of Ministers, in the Prime Minister's absence, announced on 11 November that the communiqué had been withdrawn. A spokesman for the Prime Minister denied this a day later. There were reports that previous attempts by Vohor to travel to Taipei were thwarted amid pressure from Beijing so his latest visit was done secretly on purpose. For a period of few weeks, both the PRC and ROC had diplomatic missions posted in Vanuatu while the Vanuatu government was in internal disagreement.

At one point Prime Minister Vohor punched the PRC ambassador when approached to explain why the flag of the Republic of China was flying over the hotel where the Taiwanese representative was posted. The standoff ended on 11 December 2004 when the parliament passed a motion of no-confidence against Vohor and replaced him with Ham Lini.

In May 2009, Vanuatu appointed its first ever ambassador to China, former Minister of Finance Willie Jimmy. [48] Jimmy "call[ed] [...] for China to have a foot firmly planted in the Pacific through Port Vila", which -the Vanuatu Daily Post remarked- "no doubt caused ruffled feathers among other foreign diplomatic partners". [49]

On the Chinese parade due to the 70th Anniversary of the end of World War II, policemen from Vanuatu participated. [50]

On 27 February 2017, the Chinese ambassador to Vanuatu, handed over the keys for 14 military vehicles to the Vanuatu Mobile Force. This was done as an effort to safeguard Vanuatu's sovereignty. [51]

Flag of Cuba.svg  Cuba See Cuba–Vanuatu relations

Vanuatu and Cuba established official diplomatic relations in 1983. [52]

In the late 2000s, Vanuatu began to strengthen its relations with Cuba. Cuba provides medical aid to Vanuatu, sending doctors to the country [53] and providing scholarships for ni-Vanuatu medical students to study in Cuba. [54] In September 2008, a representative of the ni-Vanuatu government attended the first Cuba-Pacific Islands ministerial meeting in Havana. The meeting aimed at "strengthening cooperation" between Cuba and Pacific Island countries, notably in coping with the effects of climate change. [55] [56]

Flag of Cyprus.svg  Cyprus
Flag of France.svg  France See France–Vanuatu relations
Flag of Georgia.svg  Georgia
  • Georgia and Vanuatu established diplomatic relations on 12 July 2013. [58] In 2019, Ralph Regenvanu visited Georgia and signed a cooperation agreement with representatives of the country. [59]
Flag of India.svg  India See India–Vanuatu relations
Flag of Israel.svg  Israel

Vanuatu and Israel established relations in 1993 and relations are conducted through Israel's Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Jerusalem. [61] Vanuatu recognizes Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. [62] In 2021, French diplomat Bernard Leclerc was appointed the Special Envoy to the State of Israel for the Republic of Vanuatu.

Flag of Italy.svg  Italy

Italy has an honorary consulate in Port Vila. [63]

Flag of Libya.svg  Libya See Libya–Vanuatu relations
  • Vanuatu's foreign policy in the 1980s, under Prime Minister Father Walter Lini, was based on refusing alignment with either bloc in the context of the Cold War, distinguishing it from every other country of Oceania, aligned with the West. [3]
Flag of Mexico.svg  Mexico
  • Mexico is accredited to Vanuatu from its embassy in Canberra, Australia. [64]
  • Vanuatu does not have an accreditation to Mexico.
Flag of the Netherlands.svg  Netherlands

Vanuatu has an honorary consulate in The Hague. [65]

Flag of New Zealand.svg  New Zealand
  • New Zealand has a High Commission in Port Vila.
  • Vanuatu has a High Commission in Wellington and a consulate-general in Auckland.
Flag of Palestine.svg  Palestine

Vanuatu recognized the State of Palestine on 21 August 1989. [66] On 19 October 1989 both States established diplomatic relations. Non-resident embassy of Palestine based in Canberra, Australia. [67]

In 2011, Vanuatu was one of fifteen countries to oppose Palestine's application to join UNESCO, as part of its bid for greater international recognition. Vanuatu former Foreign Affairs Minister and former chairman of the Vanuatu National Commission for UNESCO Joe Natuman expressed surprise at his country's position, saying it appeared to contradict Vanuatu's long-standing support for Palestine. He raised the issue in Parliament, whereupon Prime Minister Sato Kilman assured him he had not been aware that the country was voting against Palestine's membership of UNESCO, and that he would "review this decision". On that occasion, Kilman reportedly clarified Vanuatu's position with regard to Palestine, saying "Vanuatu will always maintain its position to support the right of the Palestinian people to a homeland but at the same time with Israel existing as a state on its own, with secure borders". [68]

Flag of Russia.svg  Russia See Russia–Vanuatu relations
  • In 1987, Vanuatu authorised Soviet vessels to fish within Vanuatu's Exclusive Economic Zone, in exchange for economic aid. The agreement lapsed the following year, and was not renewed, due to disagreements over the price to be paid for fishing rights by the USSR. [3] In 2021, French diplomat Bernard Leclerc was appointed the Special Envoy to the Russian Federation for the Republic of Vanuatu.
Flag of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic.svg  Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic

Vanuatu recognized the SADR on 27 November 1980, as part of its support to the right of self-determination of the peoples. On 24 November 2000, then Foreign affairs minister Serge Vohor announced that Vanuatu suspended that recognition and established ambassadorial level relations with Morocco. [69] Vanuatu's government made on 1 July 2008 a statement resuming its recognition of the Sahrawi Arab Democratic Republic and established ambassadorial level relations also with SADR. [70] The non-resident embassy of SADR to Vanuatu is based in Dili, East Timor.

Flag of South Korea.svg  South Korea See South Korea–Vanuatu relations

The Republic of Vanuatu and the Republic of Korea have established diplomatic relations on November 5, 1980.

  • The two countries have good diplomatic relations.
Flag of Spain.svg  Spain
  • Spain is accredited to Vanuatu from its embassy in Canberra, Australia.
  • Vanuatu is accredited to Spain from its embassy in Brussels, Belgium.
Flag of Ukraine.svg  Ukraine

Ukraine is represented in Vanuatu by its embassy in Canberra, Australia. [71]

Flag of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom Vanuatu established diplomatic relations with the United Kingdom on 30 July 1980.
  • Vanuatu does not maintain a high commission in the United Kingdom.
  • The UK is accredited to Vanuatu through its high commission in Port Vila. [72]

The UK governed Vanuatu jointly with France from 1906 until 1980, when Vanuatu achieved full independence.

Both countries share common membership of the Commonwealth, and the World Trade Organization. Bilaterally the two countries have signed an Investment Agreement. [73]

Flag of the United States.svg  United States See United States–Vanuatu relations
  • The United States and Vanuatu established diplomatic relations on 30 September 1986 - three months to the day after Vanuatu had established diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union. [74]
Flag of Vietnam.svg  Vietnam

Both countries established diplomatic relations on 3 March 1982. [75] There is a small Vietnamese community in Vanuatu, stemming from the colonial period when Vietnamese indentured workers were bought in by the French. [76]

See also

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Edward Natapei</span> Former Prime Minister of Vanuatu

Edward Nipake Natapei Tuta Fanua`araki was a Vanuatuan politician. He was the prime minister of Vanuatu on two occasions, and was previously the minister of Foreign Affairs briefly in 1991, the acting president of Vanuatu from 2 March 1999 to 24 March 1999 and the deputy prime minister. He was the president of the Vanua'aku Pati, a socialist, Anglophone political party.

From 1916 to 1975, Tuvalu was part of the Gilbert and Ellice Islands colony of the United Kingdom. A referendum was held in 1974 to determine whether the Gilbert Islands and Ellice Islands should each have their own administration. As a consequence of the referendum, the separate British colonies of Kiribati and Tuvalu were formed. Tuvalu became fully independent as a sovereign state within the Commonwealth on 1 October 1978. On 5 September 2000, Tuvalu became the 189th member of the United Nations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ham Lin̄i</span> Prime Minister of Vanuatu from 2004 to 2008

Ham Lin̄i Vanuaroroa is a ni-Vanuatu politician. He is a former MP from Pentecost Island in Penama Province. He was Prime Minister of Vanuatu from 11 December 2004 until 22 September 2008, and is the current Deputy Prime Minister since 16 May 2014. Lin̄i is the brother of Walter Lin̄i, one of the founders of the modern Republic of Vanuatu. Ham Lin̄i is the current leader of the National United Party (VNUP).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Melanesian Spearhead Group</span> Intergovernmental organization

The Melanesian Spearhead Group (MSG) is an intergovernmental organization, composed of the four Melanesian states of Fiji, Papua New Guinea, Solomon Islands and Vanuatu, and the Kanak and Socialist National Liberation Front of New Caledonia. In June 2015, Indonesia was recognized as an associate member.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sino-Pacific relations</span> Diplomatic competition between Mainland China and Taiwan in the Pacific

Oceania is, to the People's Republic of China and the Republic of China, a stage for continuous diplomatic competition. The PRC dictates that no state can have diplomatic relations with both the PRC and the ROC. As of 2024, eleven states in Oceania have diplomatic relations with the PRC, and three have diplomatic relations with the ROC. These numbers fluctuate as Pacific Island nations re-evaluate their foreign policies, and occasionally shift diplomatic recognition between Beijing and Taipei. The issue of which "Chinese" government to recognize has become a central theme in the elections of numerous Pacific island nations, and has led to several votes of no-confidence.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">United States–Vanuatu relations</span> Bilateral relations

The United States and Vanuatu established diplomatic relations on September 30, 1986 – three months to the day after Vanuatu had established diplomatic relations with the Soviet Union. Relations were often tense in the 1980s, under the prime ministership of Father Walter Lini in Vanuatu, but eased after that. At present, bilateral relations consist primarily in US aid to Vanuatu, and are cordial.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">International recognition of Abkhazia and South Ossetia</span>

Abkhazia and South Ossetia are separatist regions of Georgia in the Caucasus. Most countries recognise them as part of Georgia, while Russia, Venezuela, Nicaragua, Nauru, and Syria regard them as independent. Russia's initial recognition of the independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia occurred in the aftermath of the Russo-Georgian War in 2008. The government of Georgia considers the republics to be Russian-occupied territories.

Cuban-Pacific relations are diplomatic, economic, cultural, and other relations between the Cuba and countries situated in Oceania. In the 2000s, Cuba has been strengthening its relations with Pacific nations, which have, for the most part, responded favorably to Cuban medical aid in particular. The first Cuba-Pacific Islands ministerial meeting was held in September 2008 in Havana, with government members from ten Pacific countries—Kiribati, Tuvalu, Nauru, Solomon Islands, Fiji, Tonga, Vanuatu, Samoa, the Federated States of Micronesia and Papua New Guinea—attending. The meeting was a consolidation rather than a starting point of Cuban-Pacific relations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cuba–Vanuatu relations</span> Bilateral relations

Relations between Vanuatu and Cuba began shortly after the former gained its independence from France and the United Kingdom in 1980, and began establishing its own foreign policy as a newly independent state. Vanuatu and Cuba established official diplomatic relations in 1983.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vanuatu and the United Nations</span>

The Republic of Vanuatu has been a member of the United Nations since the year of its independence in 1980. The country was a particularly active member in the 1980s, when, governed by Prime Minister Father Walter Lini and represented by Ambassador Robert Van Lierop, it was a consistent advocate for decolonisation. Subsequently, its emphasis within the United Nations shifted to the issue of climate change and the vulnerability of Small Island Developing States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Russia–Vanuatu relations</span> Bilateral relations

The Republic of Vanuatu and the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics established official diplomatic relations on June 30, 1986 - three months to the day before Vanuatu established diplomatic relations with the United States. With the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, the Russian Federation emerged as its successor state in 1991.

The Wantok Blong Yumi Bill was a bill unanimously adopted by the Parliament of Vanuatu in June 2010. It was derived from a "People’s Petition", tabled in Parliament by Independent MP Ralph Regenvanu.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Abkhazia–Vanuatu relations</span> Bilateral relations

Abkhazia and Vanuatu established relations when Vanuatu recognised Abkhazia's independence on 23 May 2011. On that day a joint statement on establishment of diplomatic relations was signed. However, the exact nature of the recognition was a matter of dispute and was not regularized until July 2013. However, over the years and part of domestic powerplay within Vanuatu's government, the recognition has swung back and forth. In 2019 Vanuatu's minister of Foreign Affairs "confirmed Vanuatu’s support of Georgia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity" and effectively withdrew the recognition of Abkhazia.

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