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Ecuador: Consulate-General 4200 Westheimer Rd, Suite 218 Highland Village Egypt: Consulate-General 5718 Westheimer Rd, Suite 1350 Uptown El Salvador: Consulate-General 8300 Bissonnet St, Unit 400 Southwest Houston Equatorial Guinea: Consulate-General: 6401 Southwest Fwy Gulfton Ethiopia: Honorary Consulate 9301 Southwest Fwy, Suite 250 Braeburn
Host country Host city Mission level Year closed Ref. Colombia Cali: Consulate 2013 [8]Puerto Asís: Consulate 2013 [8] Mexico Mexico City: Embassy 2024 [9]Guadalajara
This is a list of diplomatic missions of Colombia [1] ... Ecuador: Quito: Embassy [17] Consulate-General [12] ... Houston (Texas) Consulate-General
This is a list of diplomatic missions in Ecuador. At present, the capital city of Quito hosts 38 embassies while several other countries have ambassadors accredited from other regional capitals. Several countries also maintain consulates or consulates general in other Ecuadorian cities.
A Mexican passport. Visa requirements for Mexican citizens are administrative entry restrictions by the authorities of other states placed on citizens of Mexico.. As of 2025, Mexican citizens have visa-free or visa on arrival access to 158 countries and territories, ranking the Mexican passport 21st in the world according to the Henley Passport Index.
Visa requirements for holders of ordinary passports travelling for tourism purposes: Colombia is an associated member of Mercosur.As such, its citizens enjoy unlimited access to any of the full members (Argentina, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay) and other associated members (Bolivia, Ecuador and Peru) with the right to residence and work, with no requirement other than nationality.
The Embassy of Ecuador in Washington, D.C., is the Republic of Ecuador's diplomatic mission to the United States. It is located at 2535 15th Street N.W. in Washington, D.C.'s Meridian Hill neighborhood. [1] The current building has been used as an embassy since the 1960s. [2]
Present-day Colombia and Ecuador trace back established official diplomatic relations to December 8, 1832, with the signing of the Treaty of Pasto, in which both countries recognized each other as sovereign states. The Ecuadorian diplomatic mission in New Granada (Colombia) did not open until 1837.