Established 1947Diplomat november 2009 november

D A ANKS: BEHIND THE TORY LEADERSHIP P I H S R E D A E L Y R O T E H T D N I H E B : S K N TA K N I H T E V I VAT R E S N O C

ESTABLISHEDDIPLOMAT 1947 t a m o l p i

O T S A E K O O L L U B N A T S I L L I W : U E E H T & Y E K R U T

? E V I S U L C X E R O E V I S U L C N I : 0 6 T A O T A N

is published by Envoy MediaLimited. 11Grosvenor Crescent, No. London, sw1x7ee.Registered inEngland 4650530 vember 2009 £10 9 0 0 2 r e b m e ov n

? T S E W R may 2009 may

ESTABLISHEDDIPLOMAT 1947 9 0 0 2 y a m

M O R F Y T I L A E R E H T G N I T R O S : T I M M U S 0 2 G

R E T N I 0 1 £

v

E I

w w S N O I S L U P X E C I T A M O L P I D

H T I

E H T

T N E D I S E R P

F O

E H T

C I R O T E H R E H T

I D L A M

v

S E

1 october 2009 october • • • • THE PRINCIPLES & TERMINOLOGY OF ISLAMIC FINANCE ISLAMIC OF AGE TANKS DIGITAL TERMINOLOGY A & THINK IN ECONOMIC PRINCIPLES DIPLOMACY UK THE FOR ELITE: TOOLS THE THE DEBATE DRUGS INFLUENCING GENERIC THE

ESTABLISHEDDIPLOMAT 1947 £10 9 0 0 2 r e b o t c o media pack2010 governments atonce.governments overseasmany so to access provides make foreign162audiencegovernments unrivalledof and foreign content exceptional many The London. inprofessionals living and community with essential diplomaticit the reading for affairs, interviews ambassadors lifestyle and make pages world photography, on political analysis, commentary quality high of governments. and leaders worldprominent most the of minds the into insight unique a provides in magazine old year community 63 This London. diplomatic the of heart the from discussion intelligent Diplomat Diplomat the only platform that is a magazine that is provokesa magazine Diplomat’smix DIPLOMAT Pu b l i s h e d 10 t i m e s p e r y e a r - m o n t h l y e x c e p t Ja n u a r y a n d Au g u s t w h e n w e p u b l i s h a Ye a r b o o k a n d a n Ed u c a t i o n Gu i d e . An a d v e r t i s e r t h e r e f o r e r e a c h e s t h e

july/august 2010 £10 r e a d e r s h i p o f 18,000 e v e r y m o n t h

UZBEKISTAN ISSUE THE DEAN OF THE DIPLOMATIC CORPS CHINA’S ‘CLEANTECH’ DEVELOPMENT Readership • Heads of mission and diplomats at the 162 embassies and High Commissions in London • UK Cabinet and Shadow Cabinet members as well as 650 MP’s • All members of the House of Lords working on Foreign Affairs • EU Commissioners, their senior staff and MEP’s in Brussels • Directors of FTSE-100 and FTSE-250 companies

London has the highest representation of overseas countries in any capital. Many treaties and agreements are signed because of the unrivalled diplomatic network that encourages dialogue between governments. Diplomats in London are the key advisors to policy makers and government officials in their own administration. Their advice influences their government’s budget spends and key policy decisions. Diplomat magazine is the unique portal to 162 overseas governments via their embassies in London.

Di p l o m a t i s a l s o p l a c e d i n t h e s u i t e s o f t h e t o p 10 h o t e l s i n Lo n d o n The Berkeley Hotel Intercontinental London Park Lane july/august 2010 Claridges The Kensington Hotel The Connaught The Lanesborough The Dorchester Mandarin Oriental

JULY/AUGUST cover.indd 1 23/6/10 12:58:40 Hyatt Regency - The Churchill The May Fair Hotel

2 just a few reasons to advertise • Diplomat is the only publication for foreign diplomats in the UK with through advocacy advertising on vital matters such as new political a readership of 18,000 which includes ambassadors, spouses & senior initiatives, climate change, and the communication of good corporate staff initiatives which need international support

• Diplomat is a strong brand which is 63 years old supported by its unique • Diplomat is read for its political commentary as well as the cultural features events and a website with the most up to date reference information and and it contains the important “Must Have” unique database of personal database in the diplomatic community. Recent big name writers and interviews and photographs of all newly posted ambassadors to London and contributors include Kofi Annan, David Milliband, Sir Christopher Meyer, other senior appointments Jack Straw, Harriet Harman and Vaclav Havel • Diplomat’s events allow advertisers to meet senior diplomats to discuss • Diplomat provides access to the 162 Governments represented in government policy in their sector and how to develop relations for their London with a unique opportunity to communicate and influence them business in overseas territories

2 3 what’s inside diplomatmagazine .c o m

In the f I think t a n k s 27 rst two art IC les of th we looked at the leadi Is series inspired by the work of ng independent UK think f a hayek, author of tanks, whose high reputations are b to Serfdom and Mrs Thatcher’s fav The Road Political Commentary • Country Reports the expertise at their disposal b ased not only on Under the colourful directorship o ourite economist. they are non-partisan. ut also on the fact that f ralph harris, the They are listened to – and have Iea was from the start anti-Keynesi earned respect – precisely becaus the post-war economic ortho an, challenging e of their objectivity, which renders them ‘above re growth and advocating doxy of government-led proach’. the primacy of markets in now we turn to those thin dealing with economic and k tanks that are, in social problems. The I contrast, ideologically based and went from being ignore ea politically aligned, d, even dismissed, in the ’50s starting with those both commi and ’60s to being central to econo tted to the free market and close to the Conservative P mid -’70s until the early ’90s. mic debate from the of these right-wing think arty. Indeed, several tanks command attention Thatcher initia lly felt compelled t because they are known to h shadow Cabinet the so-ca lled o include in her ave the ear of the t • Corporate Profiles • Interviews with Heads of Mission leadership. tory were completely out of sympathy or y ‘wets’ – fig ures who when Churchill was unexpected but still powerf u l fig ures in th with her ideologica lly power in the 1945 ly ejected from ol o k e d oat n , dn i d e e d d e pa rt y. she therefore labour landslide, the Conserva e p en d ed u p o nht C, e P – under the distinguished leadersh tives Iea to come up with t he idea s a nd pol s, as aI n d ‘the greatest Prime M ip of r a Butler, icies that wou ld inister we never had’ – embarked underpin the so-called Thatche on a five-year policy review. This w p h oli so p h ci ao l u otl o k sh, e r revolution. true to her m gi h bt e d e sc rbi e d a sth e fi rs t house by the Conservative as conducted in- Conser vative Pa rt y leader to have ‘contract research Department ed out’ polic y Keith Raffanoutlines the UK’s leading Conservat ( C rD). when the tories were once again thrown out development. of office in 1964, the new P has revert arty leader, ed to the more traditional ive think tanks, turned once more to the C edward heath, p ociy lm- ak ni gp ro ce osp fre vo i u s rD, then located in two • Restaurants • Hotels • the Art Scene • Social Pages including those with David Cameron’s ear rather grand Georgian h to eryal d er.s l ike his ouses on closest friend a nd colleag ue, Ge sw old Queen street, orge os b o r n e (t h e o t h e r 1 – just a few minutes’ walk ha lf of the ‘Posh sh o p B o y s)!’ ,C a m e ro n is a g‘ ra d u a te ’o f from the house of Commons. t h e C rD . when he took over as Party lea Margaret Thatcher, who ran suc ago, Ca meron rega rded his c der four years h cessfully against rucia l first ta sk a s being to eath for the tory leadership in 1975 after th ‘detox if y’ the tor y bra nd. The Conser vatives’ 1 e two general election de feats of the previous year, did not stretch in office, from 1979 to 199 8-yea r trust the ‘Party machine’. British electorate inflicting 7, had ended with the she took on h on them their most colossa l the whole tory establishment – as an outsider,eath – an and election defeat for 160 yea rs. m r hci an ay m oPt r f a rea s insurgent. one of her early acts as later put it, the l tories had come to be seen the wings’ of the C eader was ‘to clip party’. Cameron has therefor as ‘the nasty rD, ending its physical autonomy e kept at arm’s length the and incorporating it into the C three somewhat ta inted think ta onservative Central office, then located at 32 s Thatcher’s ‘glor y days’. nk s that dominated mith square, sw1 . as ideological as heath was pragmatic, Thatcher The opposition leader has kept his own had already co-founded, alo review on a tight rein, though perh policy ng with her colleague and intellectual sir Keith Joseph, had hoped. aps not as tight as he ‘guru’, the Centre for with his trusted colleague, P o lic y studies (CP in overall charge as the C , s) in 1974, some months before he rD’s chairman, Cameron leadership challenge. Its co r initially set up six policy commi re principles emphasised the value of free markets; the impo them under the chairmanship of fossions – several of rtance of individual choice and responsibility; the con Ministers since sent ‘out to grass’ onrmer tory Cabinet cepts of duty and respect for the law; rugged ind a couple of these, including the fana the backbenches. 2010 ividualism and family tical Editorial Planner values. The CPs was particula John europhobe rly influential during redwood, seized on this the early part of the Thatcher era, w float their own pet ideas – su as an opportunity to as the ‘engine room’ in wh hen it operated ch as a cut in inheritance ich such flagship policies as tax for the rich – rather than con privatisation, trade union r to Cameron’s modernising pr tribute more helpfully eform and council house oject. sales were developed. ‘Dave’, a s he is k nown in the tabloi Meanwhile, 1977 saw the establish regret his decision to a llow his polic y d press, must now ment of thea dam commissions to smith Institute ( asI), named after the author publish their own reports, in view of Wealth of Nations of The disavowals of their more emb his subsequent and Britain’s most famous econ arrassing recommendations, prior to John Maynard Keynes. omist w h ci h th e taking, like the CP labour Party will no doubt disinter the free market and freedom of s, glee as the election campaign ge with some choice as its starting ts underway. ideals, the asI was a pioneering advoca Despite tor y polic y-ma k ing having been policies of ‘contracting out’ (usi te of the once again, some external right-win centra lised ng private contractors to perform public services at both a lso proved influentia l. g think tanks have national and local of these, a rg uably the t wo most January Diplomat Yearbook Supplement levels), creating internal markets influentia l a re a lso the t wo most recently in both health and education and building public/p excha nge a nd the Centre for -formed: Polic y – the very policies that domi rivate partnerships socia l Justice (C s . )J nated Thatcher’s second P o lic y exchange, founded in 2002 by

r:Mike Rogers term in government, from 1983 t (also its director until 2007), has b nick Boles o 1987. Thatcher also harnessed to her waiting room of the next Co een described as ‘the of economic cause the Institute nservative government.’ affairs (I ea), founded 20 years before This is because Boles and his tw illustrato her ascendancy in 1955. Its establish o successors, anthony Browne and neil o’Brien, all carry considerabl ment was directly with the ‘Cameroonians’. e heft

February Faith Issue diplomatmagaz contents 5 ine.com } novembe r 09 March Afghanistan Issue 2 6

3 0 portrait 37 April Climate Change issue 5 3

May healthcare issue 36 portrait 4 5 2 4 n o ve m b e r INTELLIGENT CAR O W N E R S H IP 46 7 2 vENETIA vAN kUffELER TEST DR I vES A qUADRIGA CAR MEMBERSHIP 7 WILL TURkEy kEEP LOOkING WEST? 30 EDITOR’S LETTER THE G R E AT HOUSE 48 JONAT H A N fRyER R EPORTS ON TURkEy’S SIOBH A N M AC H I N vISITS THE L OC AT IONS LETTER TO THE EDITOR 8 PROGR E S S ON THE P A T H TO MEMBERSHIP Of June israel Issue fINDERS DREAM IN L AvENHAM, S UffOL k THE EU ESSENTIALLy E NGLISH 5 1 1 0 A G LOBA L E DUC ATION TO WINDOW ON THE WORLD HUMMINGBIRD B AkERy GLOBA L L E A DER S 34 LA DI E S ’ fAvOU R I T E S 5 2 1 1 DEBOR A H WI N S L OW NUTTER ON W H AT CONTRIBUTORS THE U L T IM A T E IN STyLE, HAIR AND THE GMAP C OU R SE AT THE fLETCHER B E A U T y fOR H ER SCHOOL HAS TO OffER LOCAL NEWS 12 GENTLEMEN’S fAvOU R I T E S 5 3 THE U L T IM A T E LU xURy BRANDS fOR H IM PARLIAMENT 1 6 PORTRAIT 36 5 6 RE S T A U R A N T R EvIEW 5 4 2 4 ESTMINSTER EfLECTIONS HER E xCELLENCy M RS J A DR A N kA July & August uzbekistan Issue W R : AC H A E L STIRLING REvIEWS B ELLAMy’S R IR AT R IC k O R M AC k SPE C U L AT E S NEG ODIC THE A MBASSADOR Of B OSNIA S P C DI PL OM AT IC C ONCIERGE 55 ON THEMONTH S EvENTS IN ARLIAMENT AND H ERzEGOvINA ’ P THE L A T E S T NEWS fR O M L O N D O N ’S H O T E L S SHOPPING fOR R OCkS AND C LOCkS 56 CREDENTIALS 3 8 fE AT U R E S DI PL OM AT UNEARTHS H AT A MOUS EAkED MAIL 1 8 NEWLy A PPOINTED T f L E SOME IRRESISTIBLE GEMS AND W A T C H E S fOR MER Uk A MBASSADOR C HARLES HEADS Of M ISSION IN L ONDON CR A W fOR D RECALLS T H AT fAT E fUL PROPE R T y 59 MOMENT AND ITS REPERCUSSIONS NOvITAS 41 September Pakistan Issue AT 20 NEW A PPOINTMENTS W IT H IN NATO 60 C U L T U R E RAHAMARvIS qUESTIONS If THE BOD y LO N D O N ’S M I S S IO N S G J ART S CENE 60 STILL HASA PU R POSE ANDfINDST H AT IT ALICE ’S A RT 63 HASBECOME ANINCREASINGL y vI TA L LIfESTyLE: ALICE fOSTER HIGHLIGHTS HISTOR IC A L INTERNATIONALORGANISATION TANyA L ING AMBASSADOR PORTR A ITS NHEARDRUTH ILLUSTRATION 4 3 THE U T 24 BOOk R EvIEWS 64 IRENE kHAN, THE fIRST WOM A N AND LES A MBASSADEURS 4 5 ASIAN S ECRETARy G ENERAL Of A MNESTy DI PL OM AT vISITS SOCIETy PAGES 67 October Grenada Issue INTERNATIONAL, DISCUS SE S POvERT y AND THE R ED R OOM HUMAN R IGHTS C A L E N D A R fOR NO vEMBER 72 THINk TANkS: PART III 26 kEITH R AffAN OUTLINES THE Uk’S 8 1 CULTURAL COMMANDMENTS 74 LEADINGR IGHT WING THINk TA N kS 3 6 - LAT vIA

} November Azerbaijan Issue november 09 } diplomatmagazine.com diplomatmagazine.com november 09 December Ghana Issue

The Ambassador of Bosnia and Herzegovina prepares to board the carriage on her way to present her Credentials at Buckingham Palace in February o s n i A An d 2009. She is accompanied by Ad o r o f b the Marshal of the Diplomatic T h e A m b As s Corps, Mr Charles Gray. he r z eg o vn i A, he r ex c e l l e n c y } november 09 4 diplomatmagazine.com 5

ne g o d ci An k A photograph by roland kemp

mr s J Ad r head of mission of head

} november 09 diplomatmagazine.com what’s inside diplomatmagazine .c o m Diplomat Online is the Banner Advertising Diplomat e-Bulletins premier online offering for the Home Page: £2,000.00 Diplomat E-bulletins are notifications diplomatic community in London. plus VAT per month sent to your desk top of new articles Diplomatmagazine.com is the most Credentials Page: on the website, new magazine content up to date reference point for anyone £1,500.00 plus VAT per month and information on our events. This looking for who works where in the will keep you up to date with all the overseas embassies in London. Our Box Advertising developments at Diplomat and at database is updated daily and has a Home Page: £1,500.00 diplomatmagazine.com. This is sent search facility that allows users an in plus VAT per month to the 2,000 recipients in our database depth insight that is not available Credentials Page: £1,100.00 from overseas embassies, Government plus VAT per month

37 portrait anywhere else in London. This is a and Brussels.

36 portrait favorite reference point because of E-Bulletin Sponsorship it’s detailed interviews with heads £3,000.00 + VAT per bulletin of mission and the listings of all employees and positions held in the overseas embassies. The site also contains a library of articles on foreign affairs that is referred to on a daily basis by those in the embassies throughout London. The Ambassador of Bosnia and Herzegovina prepares to board the carriage on her way to present her Credentials at Buckingham Palace in February o s n i A An d 2009. She is accompanied by Ad o r o f b the Marshal of the Diplomatic T h e A m b As s Corps, Mr Charles Gray. he r z eg o vn i A, he r ex c e l l e n c y } november 09 4 diplomatmagazine.com 5

ne g o d ci An k A photograph by roland kemp

mr s J Ad r head of mission of head

} november 09 diplomatmagazine.com events DIPLOMATIC BREAKFASTS Once a month Diplomat invites a company to talk on a pre-arranged theme to an audience from the diplomatic community. The event takes the form of a 20 minute presentation followed by Q&A from the audience. We invite up to 30 attendees. Chatham House rules. This is followed up by a feature on the topic in Diplomat. Cost £4,500.00 DIPLOMAT DEBATES This is an opportunity to sponsor some of the most topical and lively debates between embassies. Topics are usually covering domestic issues for overseas nations, with a panel of experts from embassies and the private sector. We have found that this is one of the most effective oppor- tunities to place your brand next to some of the most prom- inent overseas government advisors and policy makers. Like the readers of Diplomat, these participants are key influences to their governments’ spending budgets. Prices from £3,000.00 6 7 Outstanding Contribution tional community and has the full backing and DIPLOMAT OF THE to the Consular Corps enthusiasm from all overseas embassies.

YEAR AWARDS Distinguished Contribution by Sponsorship The 2010 Diplomat of the Year Awards are a Junior Diplomat Overall event sponsorship the annual awards ceremony held at The • Event branding Hyatt Regency – The Churchill. The event Deputy Head of • Present the Lifetime Achievement award was sponsored by the British luxury car maker, Mission of the Year • Guest Editor’s Letter Jaguar and Cleave and Co, who provided the in the evening’s programme stunning Diplomat awards that were specially As the only awards ceremony of its kind in the created for the winners of each award. UK, it draws great attention from the interna- Cost - £18,000.00 + VAT

The Categories for the awards are as follows:

Distinguished Contribution to Diplomacy

Diplomat of the Year from Asia

Diplomat of the Year from Europe

Diplomat of the Year from the Americas (USA, Canada, Central America & Caribbean)

Diplomat of the Year from South America diplomat’s 2010 Annual awards winners

Diplomat of the Year from Africa ‘I could not help but feel highly honoured by such a significant tribute as this, coming as it does from the premier magazine that so ably represents the noble Diplomat of the Year from the profession that I have served for so long.’ Middle East He r Ex c e l l e n c y Li n d i w e Ma b u z a , Fo r m e r Hi g h Commissioner o f So u t h Af r i c a

6 7 annual supplements

Diplomat Yearbook 18 diplomatic missions diplomatic missions 19

EGYPT CZECH REPUBLIC EGYPT FIJI Embassy of the Czech Republic Embassy of the Arab Republic of Egypt High Commission of the Republic 26 Kensington Palace Gardens 26 South Street of the Fiji Islands Diplomat Yearbook is an annual directory sent to London W8 4QY London W1K 1DW 34 Hyde Park Gate T e l : 020 7243 1115 T e l : 020 7499 3304 London SW7 5DN F a x : 020 7727 9654 F a x : 020 7491 1542 T e l : 020 7584 3661 www.czechembassy.org.uk www.egyptian-embassy.org.uk F a x : 020 7584 2834 A m b a s s a d o r A m b a s s a d o r www.fijihighcommission.org.uk all subscribers of Diplomat and also issued officially HE Mr Michael Zantovsk y HE Mr Hatem Seif el Nasr High Commissioner HE Mr Pio Bosco Tikoisuva DENMARK EL SALVADOR Royal Danish Embassy Embassy of El Salvador FINLAND 55 Sloane Street 1st & 2nd Floors Embassy of Finland throughout the year to over 2,000 new diplomats London SW1X 9SR 8 Dorset Square 38 Chesham Place T e l : 020 7333 0200 London NW1 6PU London SW1X 8HW GABON GAMBIA F a x : 020 7333 0270 T e l : 0207 224 9800 T e l : 020 7838 6200 www.denmark.org.uk F a x : 0207 224 9878 F a x : 020 7235 3680 A m b a s s a d o r www.embassy.el-salvador.org.uk w w w . fi n e m b . o r g . u k GERMANY and their families on their arrival in the UK. This is HE Mr Birger Riis-Jørgensen Chargé d’Affaires A m b a s s a d o r Embassy of the Ms Gilda Velasquez HE Mr Jaakko Laajava Federal Republic DJIBOUTI o f G e r m a n y Embassy of the Republic of EQUATORIAL GUINEA FRANCE 23 Belgrave Square D j i b o u t i Embassy of the Republic of Embassy of France London SW1X 8PZ the most up to date and comprehensive reference 26 Rue Emile Ménier, Equatorial Guinea 58 Knightsbridge SW1X 7JT T e l : 020 7824 1300 75116 Paris, France 13 Park Place T e l : 020 7073 1000 F a x : 020 7824 1435 T e l : +33 (0) 1 4727 4922 London SW1A 1LP F a x : 020 7073 1004 www.london.diplo.de F a x : +33 (0) 1 4553 5053 T e l : 020 7499 6867 www.ambafrance-uk.org A m b a s s a d o r A m b a s s a d o r F a x : 020 7499 6782 A m b a s s a d o r HE Mr Georg book for all information on the overseas embassies HE Mr Rachad Farah www.embarege-londres.org HE Mr Maurice Boomgaarden A m b a s s a d o r Gourdault-Montagne DOMINICA HE Mr Agustín Nze Nfumu ERITREA GHANA GEORGIA Office of the High Commissioner GABON O f fi c e o f t h e H i g h for the Commonwealth of ERITREA Embassy of the Gabonese Commissioner for Ghana in London. As an indispensable reference point D o m i n i c a Embassy of the State of Eritrea R e p u b l i c 13 Belgrave Square 1 Collingham Gardens 96 White Lion Street 27 Elvaston Place London SW1X 8PS London SW5 0HW London N1 9PF London SW7 5NL T e l : 020 7201 5900 T e l : 020 7370 5194 T e l : 020 7713 0096 T e l : 020 7823 9986 F a x : 020 7245 9552 F a x : 020 7373 8743 F a x : 020 7713 0161 F a x : 020 7584 0047 www.ghanahighcommission for the international political community, the www.dominicahighcommission.co.uk A m b a s s a d o r A m b a s s a d o r u k . c o m Acting High Commissioner HE Mr Tesfamicael Gerahtu HE Mr Omer Piankali High Commissioner Ms Agnes Adonis Ogbaghiorghis HE Professor T H E G A M B I A Kwako Danso-Boafo DOMINICAN ESTONIA The Gambia High Commission information included is: REPUBLIC Embassy of the Republic of Estonia 57 Kensington Court GREECE Embassy of the Dominican Republic 16 Hyde Park Gate London W8 5DG Embassy of Greece ESTONIA 139 Inverness Terrace London SW7 5DG T e l : 020 7937 6316 1A Holland Park GERMANY London W2 6JF T e l : 020 7589 3428 F a x : 020 7937 9095 London W11 3TP T e l : 020 7727 7091 F a x : 020 7589 3430 High Commissioner T e l : 020 7229 3850 F a x : 020 7727 3693 www.estonia.gov.uk HE Mrs Elizabeth F a x : 020 7229 7221 www.dominicanembassy.org.uk A m b a s s a d o r Ya Eli Harding www.greekembassy.org.uk A m b a s s a d o r HE Dr Margus Laidre Chargé d’Affaires HE Mr Anibal de Castro GEORGIA Mr Constantine Economides ETHIOPIA Embassy of Georgia • Contact details for all community in the UK Embassy of the Federal ECUADOR 4 Russell Gardens GRENADA Embassy of Ecuador Democratic Republic of Ethiopia London W14 8EZ High Commission for Grenada Flat 3B, 3 Hans Crescent 17 Princes Gate T e l : 020 7348 1941 The Chapel, Archel Road London SW1X 0LS London SW7 1PZ F a x : 020 7603 6682 West Kensington T e l : 020 7584 8084 T e l : 020 7589 7212 www.geoemb.org.uk London W14 9QH overseas embassies & • Brands your country F a x : 020 7823 9701 F a x : 020 7584 7054 www.uk.mfa.gov.ge T e l : 020 7385 4415 www.consuladoecuador.org.uk www.ethioembassy.org.uk A m b a s s a d o r F a x : 020 7381 4807 A m b a s s a d o r A m b a s s a d o r HE Mr Giorgi High Commissioner high commissions, should work within 2010 FIJI v a c a n t HE Mr Berhanu Kebede B a d r i d z e HE Ms Ruth Rouse GRENADA

2010 yearbook } diplomatmagazine.com 2010 yearbook } diplomatmagazine.com 2010 yearbook } diplomatmagazine.com diplomatmagazine.com } 2010 yearbook Government departments • Specialist car dealerships Full colour display advertising rates for yearbook & UK companies • Hotels & hospitality Double page spread £8,000 Single page £4,000 • Protocol rules such as services Outside back cover £5,750 Half page £2,500 taxation allowances, • Specialist financial Inside front cover £5,500 Quarter page £1,400 duty-free and motoring services Inside back cover £5,000 • Comprehensive services • Health Care Diplomatic Directory rates per issue listings for the diplomatic • Local authorities Each 1/16 page segment £95 8