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・ Equatorial Guinean general election, 1968
・ Equatorial Guinean legislative election, 1983
・ Equatorial Guinean legislative election, 1988
・ Equatorial Guinean legislative election, 1993
・ Equatorial Guinean legislative election, 1999
・ Equatorial Guinean legislative election, 2004
・ Equatorial Guinean legislative election, 2008
・ Equatorial Guinean legislative election, 2013
・ Equatorial Guinean peseta
・ Equatorial Guinean presidential election, 1973
・ Equatorial Guinean presidential election, 1989
・ Equatorial Guinean presidential election, 1996
・ Equatorial Guinean presidential election, 2002
・ Equatorial Guinean presidential election, 2009
・ Equatorial Guinea–Nigeria Maritime Boundary Treaty
Equatorial Guinea–North Korea relations
・ Equatorial Guinea–Russia relations
・ Equatorial Guinea–São Tomé and Príncipe Maritime Boundary Treaty
・ Equatorial Guinea–United States relations
・ Equatorial layered deposits
・ Equatorial mount
・ Equatorial Palm Oil
・ Equatorial plasma bubble
・ Equatorial platform
・ Equatorial ridge
・ Equatorial ridge on Iapetus
・ Equatorial ring
・ Equatorial room
・ Equatorial Rossby wave
・ Equatorial round-eared bat


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Equatorial Guinea–North Korea relations : ウィキペディア英語版
Equatorial Guinea–North Korea relations

Equatorial Guinea–North Korea relations refers to the current and historical relationship between Equatorial Guinea and North Korea. While Equatorial Guinea has no representation in North Korea, it is one of few African states to have a North Korean embassy, located in the capital of Malabo.
Diplomatic relations between Equatorial Guinea and the Democratic People's Republic of Korea (DPRK, commonly known as North Korea) were established in 1969, a year after Equatoguinean independence from Spain. The country's first leader, soon-to-be President for Life Francisco Macías Nguema, would come to lead one of the most brutal regimes on the African continent. Despite his anti-communism, he maintained close relations with the Soviet Union and various pro-Soviet states, prominent among them North Korea. Like the Zairean regime of Mobutu Sese Seko, the DPRK favoured Macías Nguema regardless of his ideological opposition to Marxism–Leninism.
During the early 1970s Equatorial Guinea signed military, technical and economic agreement with many socialist states, among others North Korea. Troops from the Korean People's Army were also sent as advisers to the military of Equatorial Guinea.〔 Under inspiration from the Workers' Party of Korea, the sole legal party in the country was renamed from "United National' Party" to "United National Workers' Party" in July 1971.
After Francisco Macías Nguema was overthrown and executed by his nephew and successor Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo in 1979, his family fled to Pyongyang, where his three children were raised by the North Korean government. One of them, Monique, left the DPRK in 1994 after fifteen years. In 2013 she published her memoirs, entitled "I'm Monique, From Pyongyang".
Despite this, close relations continued after the coup, and remain active. In 2011 Yang Hyong-sop, Vice President of the Presidium of the Supreme People's Assembly, made a four-day visit to Equatorial Guinea. In 2013 President Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, the world's third longest-ruling non-royal head of state and one of the richest leaders in the world, was presented the "First International Kim Jong-il Award" by a North Korean delegation.
==See also==

* Foreign relations of Equatorial Guinea
* Foreign relations of North Korea

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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