Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Norway)

Coordinates: 59°54′52.56″N 10°43′44.98″E / 59.9146000°N 10.7291611°E / 59.9146000; 10.7291611

Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Agency overview
Formed June 7, 1905
Jurisdiction Kingdom of Norway
Headquarters Victoria Terrasse, Oslo, Norway
Annual budget Nok.34 billion
Agency executive
Child agencies
Website Ministry of Foreign affairs
Footnotes
List of Norwegian ministries

The Royal Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs (Norwegian (Bokmål): Det kongelige Utenriksdepartement; Norwegian (Nynorsk): Det kongelege Utanriksdepartement) is the foreign ministry of the Kingdom of Norway. It was established on June 7, 1905, the same day the Parliament of Norway (Stortinget) decided to dissolve the personal union with Sweden.

The ministry is headed by Minister of Foreign Affairs, currently Børge Brende who is minister in the Solberg's Cabinet that has governed since 16 October 2013.

Between 1983 and October 2013, the ministry also had a Minister of International Development but this position was abolished by the Solberg's Cabinet and the foreign minister became the sole head of the ministry.

Organisation

The Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs is organised with 110 foreign missions and three subordinate organisations: Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (Norad), FK Norway (the Norwegian "Peace Corps") and the development country investment fund Norfund. The Ministry and foreign missions have a total staff of approx. 2,400.

The Political level

Minister of Foreign Affairs Børge Brende

The Operational level

The ministry occupies the historic Victoria Terrasse building in Oslo

The top public servant is the Secretary General (utenriksråd) with an Assistant Secretary General as substitute (the latter also with a special responsibility for international development issues).

The Ministry was reorganised on June 19, 2006 - and currently has eight departments, each headed by a Director General (ekspedisjonssjef):

Subsidiaries

2009

In 2009, the ministry permitted the sale of military communications equipment to Libya, from a Norwegian company (Teleplan Globe) through General Dynamics (in Britain).[1]

See also

References

  1. Johansen, Carl (2011-11-06). "Dødsrutinene". Verdens Gang. p. 49.

External links

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