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Thomas Eardley Bromley : ウィキペディア英語版 | Thomas Eardley Bromley
Sir Thomas Bromley KCMG (14 December 1911 – 18 June 1987) was a British diplomat who was ambassador to Somalia, Syria, Algeria and Ethiopia. ==Career== Thomas Eardley Bromley was educated at Rugby School and Magdalen College, Oxford. He joined the British Consular Service in 1935 and was a vice-consul in Japan from 1938〔(The London Gazette, 12 May 1939 )〕 until 1941 when Japan entered World War II. He then returned to London and after the war served at Washington, D.C., and Baghdad. Bromley was the first Ambassador to the then Somali Republic after independence on 1 July 1960,〔(The London Gazette, 5 May 1961 )〕 then ambassador to Syria 1962–64〔(The London Gazette, 16 March 1962 )〕 following its secession from the United Arab Republic, then ambassador to Algeria from 1964〔(The London Gazette, 6 November 1964 )〕 until Algeria, along with other members of the OAU, broke off diplomatic relations in December 1965 over Rhodesia. Bromley's last ambassadorship was to Ethiopia 1966–69.〔(The London Gazette, 16 December 1966 )〕 In 1968, while addressing a gathering of 2,000 university students in Addis Ababa, he was stoned by demonstrators against the Smith regime in Rhodesia.〔(Africans pelt British envoys ), ''The Times'', London, 13 March 1968, page 1〕
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