Embassy of Myanmar, Belgrade
| Embassy of Myanmar, Belgrade | |
|---|---|
| Location | Belgrade, Serbia |
| Address | Kneza Miloša Street 72[1][2] |
| Coordinates | 44°48′07″N 20°27′18″E / 44.80194°N 20.45500°E |
| Ambassador | U Aung Min Oo[3][4] |
The Embassy of Myanmar in Belgrade (Burmese: ဘယ်လ်ဂရိတ်မြို့ရှိ မြန်မာသံရုံး, Serbian: Амбасада Мјанмара у Београду, romanized: Ambasada Mjanmara u Beogradu) is the diplomatic mission of Myanmar in the Serbia. Myanmar opened its embassy in Belgrade in 1955 at its present location at Kneza Miloša Street 72.[5]
History
Burma and the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia established formal diplomatic relations in 1950, quickly developing close cooperation grounded in shared ideological and foreign-policy orientations.[6] Burmese political elites were notably influenced by the Yugoslav model of independent socialism following the Tito–Stalin split, while both states sought to assert autonomy within the Cold War order. These affinities were clearly reflected in Yugoslavia’s participation in the 1953 Asian Socialist Conference in Rangoon.[7] Belgrade interpreted this participation as a gesture of recognition, and it coincided with the opening of the Yugoslav embassy in Rangoon.[8]
See also
References
- ^ "Ambasada Unije Mjanmar u Srbiji". CorD. Retrieved 3 February 2026.
- ^ "Служба" [Service] (in Serbian). Borba, as archived by the Belgrade University Library. 14 June 1965. Retrieved 3 February 2026.
- ^ "ဆားဘီးယားနိုင်ငံဆိုင်ရာ မြန်မာသံအမတ်/သံရုံးယာယီတာဝန်ခံ ဂရိနိုင်ငံ၏ (၂၀၃)ကြိမ်မြောက်အမျိုးသားနေ့ အခမ်းအနားသို့ တက်ရောက် (၂၅-၃-၂၀၂၄ ရက်)" (in Burmese). Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Myanmar). 25 March 2024. Retrieved 3 February 2026.
- ^ "U Aung Min Oo appointed as Ambassador of Myanmar to Federal Democratic Republic of Ethiopia". Ministry of Information (Myanmar). Retrieved 3 February 2026.
- ^ "Home". Ambasada Unije Mjanmar u Srbiji. Retrieved 3 February 2026.
- ^ "Мјанмар". Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Serbia). Retrieved 3 February 2026.
- ^ Jovan Čavoški (April 2010). Arming Nonalignment: Yugoslavia's Relations with Burma and the Cold war in Asia (1950-1955) (PDF). Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars.
- ^ Čavoški, Jovan (2019). "Ideološki prijatelj iz daleka: Jugoslavija i Azijska socijalistička konferencija" [Ideological Friend from Afar: Yugoslavia and the Asian Socialist Conference]. Istorija 20. veka (1). Institute for Contemporary History, Belgrade: 139–160.