နိုင်ငံခြားရေး ဝန်ကြီးဌာန | |
Agency overview | |
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Formed | 17 March 1947 (Department), 25 May 1967 (Ministry) |
Preceding agencies |
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Jurisdiction | Government of Myanmar |
Headquarters | Office No (9), Naypyidaw 19°45′12″N 96°07′09″E / 19.7534296°N 96.1192157°E |
Minister responsible |
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Child agencies |
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Website | www |
Myanmar portal |
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Burmese: နိုင်ငံခြားရေး ဝန်ကြီးဌာန, [nàɪɰ̃ŋàɰ̃dʑájé wʊ̀ɰ̃dʑí tʰàna̰], 'MOFA') is a ministry in the government of Myanmar responsible for the country's foreign relations. It also operates embassies and consulates in 44 countries.[1] It is headed by Than Swe, appointed by military leader Min Aung Hlaing.[2]
List of ministers
No. | Name | Term of office | Political party | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Took office | Left office | Time in office | |||
Pre-independence British Burma | |||||
– | Aung San | 17 March 1946 | 19 July 1947 | 1 year, 124 days | Military |
– | U Nu | 19 July 1947 | 1 August 1947 | 13 days | Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League |
– | Lun Baw | 1 August 1947 | 30 October 1947 | 90 days | Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League |
– | Tin Htut | 30 October 1947 | 16 August 1948 | 291 days | Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League |
Union of Burma (1948–1974) | |||||
1 | Sao Hkun Hkio | 16 August 1948 | 14 September 1948 | 29 days | Independent |
2 | Kyaw Nyein | 14 September 1948 | 31 March 1949 | 198 days | Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League |
(1) | Sao Hkun Hkio | 31 March 1949 | 5 April 1949 | 5 days | Independent |
3 | Aye Maung | 5 April 1949 | 20 December 1949 | 249 days | Anti-Fascist People's Freedom League |
(1) | Sao Hkun Hkio | 10 December 1949 | 28 October 1958 | 8 years, 322 days | Independent |
4 | Thein Maung | 28 October 1958 | 27 February 1959 | 122 days | Military |
5 | Chan Tun Aung | 27 February 1959 | 4 April 1960 | 1 year, 37 days | Military |
(1) | Sao Hkun Hkio | 4 April 1960 | 1 March 1962 | 1 year, 331 days | Independent |
6 | Thi Han | 2 March 1962 | 19 June 1969 | 7 years, 108 days | Military |
7 | Maung Lwin | 18 June 1969 | 4 August 1970 | 1 year, 47 days | Military |
8 | Hla Han | 4 August 1970 | 20 April 1972 | 1 year, 260 days | Military |
9 | U Kyaw Soe | 20 April 1972 | 2 March 1974 | 1 year, 316 days | Military |
Socialist Republic of the Union of Burma (1974–1988) | |||||
10 | Hla Phone | 2 March 1974 | 3 March 1978 | 4 years, 1 day | Burma Socialist Programme Party |
11 | Myint Maung | 3 March 1978 | 18 March 1980 | 2 years, 15 days | Burma Socialist Programme Party |
12 | Lay Maung | 18 March 1980 | 9 November 1981 | 1 year, 236 days | Burma Socialist Programme Party |
13 | Chit Haling | 9 November 1981 | 4 November 1985 | 3 years, 360 days | Burma Socialist Programme Party |
14 | Ye Gaung | 4 November 1985 | 18 September 1988 | 2 years, 319 days | Burma Socialist Programme Party |
Union of Myanmar (1988–2011) | |||||
15 | Saw Maung | 18 September 1988 | 17 September 1991 | 3 years, 0 days | Military |
16 | Ohn Gyaw | 18 September 1991 | 15 November 1998 | 6 years, 58 days | Independent |
17 | Win Aung | 15 November 1998 | 18 September 2004 | 5 years, 308 days | Military |
18 | Nyan Win | 18 September 2004 | 30 March 2011 | 6 years, 193 days | Military |
Republic of the Union of Myanmar (2011–present) | |||||
19 | Wunna Maung Lwin | 30 March 2011 | 30 March 2016 | 5 years, 0 days | Union Solidarity and Development Party |
20 | Aung San Suu Kyi | 30 March 2016 | 1 February 2021 | 4 years, 308 days | National League for Democracy |
(19) | Wunna Maung Lwin | 1 February 2021 | 1 February 2023 | 2 years, 0 days | Union Solidarity and Development Party |
21 | Than Swe[3] | 1 February 2023 | Incumbent | 348 days |
History
During World War II, the British administration retreated to India. In 1942, the foreign affairs is served by Defence Department. After World War II, Defence and External Affairs Department was established and directly served by counsellor of the governor.
In 1946, it was under the executive council and served by General Aung San, the vice chair of that council. Later, the Myanmar Representatives led by General Aung San and British Government agreed to act the foreign cases according to Myanmar.
The Department of Foreign Affairs was established on 17 March 1947 under General Aung San. The first secretary was Shwe Baw.
On 4 May 1948, it was renamed Foreign Office and the secretary became permanent secretary. On 25 May 1967, it became Ministry of Foreign Affairs.[4]
Departments and heads of departments
- Director General:ASEAN Affairs Department: Ye Kyaw Mya
- Director General:Consular and Legal Affairs Department: Kyaw Tin Shane
- Director General:Political Department: Aung Ko
- Director General:International Organizations and Economic Department: Marlar Than Htike
- Director General:Planning and Administrative Department: Aung Kyaw Zan
- Director General:Protocol Department: Wunna Han
- Director General:Strategic Studies and Training Department: Aung Myint
- Director General:Union Ministry Office: Chan Aye
List of deputy ministers
- Hla Phone (1969–1974)
- U Win (1974–1978)
- Tin Ohn (1978–1983)
- Hla Shwe (1983–1985)
- Saw Hlaing (1985–1988)
- Ohn Gyaw (1989–1991)
- Khin Maung Win (1991–2004)
- Kyaw Thu (2003–2009)
- Maung Myint (2004–2012)
- Myo Myint (2011–2012)
- Thant Kyaw (2012–2016)
- Zinyaw (2012–2014)
- Tin Oo Lwin (2014–2016)
- Kyaw Tin (2016–2017)
- Kyaw Myo Htut (2021–present)
See also
References
- ↑ "Ministry Of Foreign Affairs". Myanmar Online Data Information Network Solutions. 2002. Archived from the original on 17 October 2018. Retrieved 18 April 2012.
- ↑ "Myanmar coup: who are the military figures running the country?". The Guardian. 2 February 2021. Archived from the original on 17 February 2021. Retrieved 23 February 2021.
- ↑ "ပြည်ထောင်စုသမ္မတမြန်မာနိုင်ငံတော် နိုင်ငံတော်စီမံအုပ်ချုပ်ရေးကောင်စီ အမိန့်အမှတ်၊ ၆ / ၂၀၂၃ ၁၃၈၄ ခုနှစ်၊ တပို့တွဲလဆန်း ၁၂ ရက် (၂၀၂၃ ခုနှစ်၊ ဖေဖော်ဝါရီလ ၁ ရက်) ပြည်ထောင်စုအစိုးရအဖွဲ့ ပြင်ဆင်ဖွဲ့စည်းခြင်း". Archived from the original on 1 February 2023. Retrieved 1 February 2023.
- ↑ "Ministry of Foreign Affairs". Myanmar National Portal. Archived from the original on 21 April 2019. Retrieved 21 April 2019.
External links
- (in English) Ministry of Foreign Affairs