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==State visits==
==State visits==
[[File:Reunión con el Primer Ministro de Rumania. (22545940562).jpg|thumb|right|Romanian Prime Minister Victor Ponta meeting with Mexican President [[Enrique Peña Nieto]] in Mexico City; 2015]]

'''Presidential visits from Romania to Mexico'''<ref name="Presient"/><ref>[http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/nacion/28081.html Ganó México admiración, dice el presidente rumano (in Spanish)]</ref><ref>[http://fox.presidencia.gob.mx/en/activities/pressreleases/?contenido=2770&pagina=23 Vicente Fox Quesada held a working meeting with the president of Romania, Ion Iliescu]</ref>
'''Presidential and Prime Ministerial visits from Romania to Mexico'''<ref name="Presient"/><ref>[http://www.eluniversal.com.mx/nacion/28081.html Ganó México admiración, dice el presidente rumano (in Spanish)]</ref><ref>[http://fox.presidencia.gob.mx/en/activities/pressreleases/?contenido=2770&pagina=23 Vicente Fox Quesada held a working meeting with the president of Romania, Ion Iliescu]</ref>


* President [[Nicolae Ceaușescu]] (1974)
* President [[Nicolae Ceaușescu]] (1974)
* President [[Emil Constantinescu]] (2000)
* President [[Emil Constantinescu]] (2000)
* President [[Ion Iliescu]] (2002)
* President [[Ion Iliescu]] (2002)
* Prime Minister [[Victor Ponta]] (2015)


As of yet, no Mexican President has visited Romania.
As of yet, no Mexican President has visited Romania.

Revision as of 15:05, 31 July 2016

Mexico–Romania relations
Map indicating locations of Mexico and Romania

Mexico

Romania

Mexico–Romania relations refers to the diplomatic relations between Mexico and Romania.

History

Former Romanian President Nicolae Ceaușescu receiving Mexican Foreign Minister Jorge Castañeda y Álvarez de la Rosa in Bucharest, 1979.

Knowledge of Mexico in Romania goes back to the early sixteenth century when a series of manuscripts on pre-Columbian priests and cultures circulated in Romania.[1] In the seventeenth century, maize (originally a crop from Mexico) was introduced to Romania and in subsequent centuries, Romania would become one of the largest producers of the crop.[1]

The first official contact between Mexico and Romania was in April 1880 when then Prince Carol I of Romania sent a letter to Mexican President Porfirio Díaz informing him of Romania's independence from the Ottoman Empire by the Treaty of Berlin in 1878.[2] Diplomatic relations between both nations were officially established on 20 July 1935 in Paris between foreign ministers of both nations.[3] On 24 December 1941, diplomatic relations were severed by Mexico when Romania joined the axis powers during World War II.[3] It wasn't until March 1973 that diplomatic relations would be re-established between both nations. Soon afterwards, embassies were opened in both nations capitals respectively.[3] In September 1989, Mexico closed its embassy in Bucharest for financial reasons; however, the embassy was re-opened in 1995.[4]

In 1974, Romanian President Nicolae Ceaușescu became the first Romanian head of state to pay an official visit to Mexico.[5] During his visit, both nations signed bilateral agreements on:[6]

  • Technical and Scientifica cooperation
  • Education, culture, youth and sports
  • Double taxation and tax evasion

In 2012, approximately 10,000 Romanian citizens visited Mexico while at the same time, over 3,000 Mexican citizens visited Romania for touristic purposes.[6] In 2015, both nations celebrated the 80th anniversary since the establishment of diplomatic relations.

State visits

Romanian Prime Minister Victor Ponta meeting with Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto in Mexico City; 2015

Presidential and Prime Ministerial visits from Romania to Mexico[5][7][8]

As of yet, no Mexican President has visited Romania.

Trade

In 1997, Mexico and the European Union (which includes Romania who joined the union in 2004) signed a free trade agreement. In 2014, two-way trade between both nations amounted to $486 million USD.[9] Mexico's main exports to Romania include: building materials, automobile parts, paper, beer and tequila. Romania's main exports to Mexico include: cylinders, circuits, automobile parts and fiber optic cables.[9]

Resident diplomatic missions

References