Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Host country Host city Mission level Year closed Ref. Colombia Cali: Consulate 2013 [8]Puerto Asís: Consulate 2013 [8] Mexico Mexico City: Embassy 2024 [9]Guadalajara
This is a list of diplomatic missions in Ecuador. At present, the capital city of Quito hosts 38 embassies while several other countries have ambassadors accredited from other regional capitals. Several countries also maintain consulates or consulates general in other Ecuadorian cities.
All resident consulates in New Jersey are located in the northeastern region of the state. Colombia, 550 Broad Street, Newark [1]; Ecuador, 400 Market Street, Newark [2]; El Salvador, 40 Parker Road, Elizabeth [3]
Citizens of most countries may stay up to 90 days without a valid visa. All visitors must hold a national passport valid for 6 months, (except citizens of Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Paraguay, Peru & Uruguay who can also enter Ecuador with a national ID card). [1]
The Embassy of Ecuador in Washington, D.C., is the Republic of Ecuador's diplomatic mission to the United States. It is located at 2535 15th Street N.W. in Washington, D.C.'s Meridian Hill neighborhood. [1] The current building has been used as an embassy since the 1960s. [2]
Initial diplomatic interactions began when William Wheelwright was confirmed by the U.S. Senate as the first U.S. Consul in Guayaquil in 1825. Diplomatic recognition of Ecuador as a separate state from the Colombian federation by the United States followed in 1832, subsequent to Ecuador's secession from Colombia in 1830. [1]
Chargé d'affaires to the governments of New Granada and Ecuador with residence en Bogotá [1] 1835 1836 Andrew Jackson: James Chamberlayne Pickett [2] Plenipotentiary for signing a Treaty of Peace and Commerce 1838 1839 Martin Van Buren: Van Brugh Livingston: Chargé d'affaires: August 12, 1848 November 12, 1849 James K. Polk: John Trumbull ...
Queens County's percentage of Ecuadorians is about 4.7%, and it has the largest Ecuadorian community of any county in New York and in the United States, numbering just about 101,000 in 2010. Ecuadorians are the 2nd largest South American Hispanic group in New York City as well as in the State of New York. [17]