在札幌(城市)的俄罗斯领事馆
Last update: 2023
机构 | 在札幌(城市), 日本的俄罗斯领事馆 |
机构类型 | 总领事馆 |
联系地址 | Chuo-ku, South-, West-, - Sapporo 064-0914 Japan |
联系邮箱 | 目前没有提供 |
联系电话 | |
传真号码 | (+81) 11-561-8897 |
工作时间 | Monday-Friday: 14:00-16:00 |
大使(机构负责人) | Mr Andrey Fabrichnikov, Consul General |
网站 | |
这个页面提供俄罗斯领事馆在札幌(城市)的详细信息,包括机构类型,联系地址,联系电话,网站,等等。俄罗斯在日本有4个领事馆,你可以使用网页左侧的菜单查看其他领事馆的详细信息。
俄罗斯在全世界总共有327个外交机构,其中175个是领事馆。全世界其他国家一共有363外交机构在俄罗斯,其中有195个是领事馆。
俄罗斯在日本有大使馆,位于Tokyo。点击这里可以查看详情。
领事馆是一国驻在他国某个城市的领事代表机关的总称,有总领事馆,领事馆,副领事馆等,负责管理当地本国侨民和其它领事事务。两个国家断交,一定会撤销大使馆,但不一定撤销领事馆。大使馆的职责范围遍及驻在国各个地区,领事馆只负责所辖地区。大使馆通常受政府和外交部门的直接领导,而领事馆通常接受外交部门和所在国大使馆的双重领导。许多国家在多数国家只设大使馆,不设领事馆。设不设领事馆,设哪个级别的领事馆,主要看侨民和领事业务的多少以及所在地区的重要性,并依照对等原则进行。
请注意,虽然我们一直在更新我们的数据库信息,但是我们无法保证我们的数据永远是最新的,因此建议在办理您的涉外事务之前联系一下相关领事馆做确认。
俄罗斯和日本的关系
Relations between Russia and Japan (Russian: Российско-японские отношения, Rossiysko-yaponskiye otnosheniya; Japanese: 日露関係史) are the continuation of the relationship of Japan with the Soviet Union from 1917 to 1991, and with the Russian Empire from 1855 to 1917. Historically, the two countries had cordial relations until a clash of territorial ambitions in the Manchuria region of northeastern China led to the Russo–Japanese War in 1904, ending in a Japanese victory which contributed to the weakening of the monarchy in Russia. Japan would later intervene in the Russian Civil War from 1918 until 1922, sending troops to the Russian Far East and Siberia. That was followed by border conflicts between the new Soviet Union and the Empire of Japan throughout the 1930s. The two countries signed a nonaggression pact in 1941, although the Soviet government declared war on Japan anyway in August 1945, invading of the Japanese puppet state of Manchukuo as well as seizing the chain of islands just north of Japan. The two countries have been unable to sign a peace treaty after World War II due to the Kuril Islands dispute.
As of December 2017 matters remain unresolved, and these disputes have effectively soured relations between the two countries. According to a 2017 Pew Global Attitudes Project survey, 64% of Japanese people view Russia unfavorably, compared with 26% who viewed it favorably. People ages 50 and older are much less likely to hold a favorable view of Russia (16%) than those 18 to 29 (53%). Nonetheless, the Japanese government sees Russia as an important partner for security and counterbalancing China and North Korea in the region. Because of this, since the start of the Ukrainian Crisis and the 2014 annexation of Crimea, Japan has continued to engage with Russia in spite of sanctions against the country by Japan's Western allies. The governments of the two countries have taken efforts to increase relations, including Japanese investment in Russia, military cooperation, and organizing a year of cultural exchange between Russia and Japan for 2018.
On 27 April, 2018 in Moscow was held the fourth Russia-Japan forum dubbed The Points of Convergence, where the sides discussed pressing issues concerning the two countries’ trade and economic relations. Toshihiro Nikai, the secretary general of Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party, was the forum’s special guest, read out Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s address at the event’s opening ceremony. Participants discussed the two countries’ tourism cooperation, investment projects for the Far East and other Russian regions, as well as interaction in the areas of infrastructure, technology and energy industry. []
--维基百科
As of December 2017 matters remain unresolved, and these disputes have effectively soured relations between the two countries. According to a 2017 Pew Global Attitudes Project survey, 64% of Japanese people view Russia unfavorably, compared with 26% who viewed it favorably. People ages 50 and older are much less likely to hold a favorable view of Russia (16%) than those 18 to 29 (53%). Nonetheless, the Japanese government sees Russia as an important partner for security and counterbalancing China and North Korea in the region. Because of this, since the start of the Ukrainian Crisis and the 2014 annexation of Crimea, Japan has continued to engage with Russia in spite of sanctions against the country by Japan's Western allies. The governments of the two countries have taken efforts to increase relations, including Japanese investment in Russia, military cooperation, and organizing a year of cultural exchange between Russia and Japan for 2018.
On 27 April, 2018 in Moscow was held the fourth Russia-Japan forum dubbed The Points of Convergence, where the sides discussed pressing issues concerning the two countries’ trade and economic relations. Toshihiro Nikai, the secretary general of Japan’s ruling Liberal Democratic Party, was the forum’s special guest, read out Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s address at the event’s opening ceremony. Participants discussed the two countries’ tourism cooperation, investment projects for the Far East and other Russian regions, as well as interaction in the areas of infrastructure, technology and energy industry. []
--维基百科