Diplomatic relations between the Ivory Coast (Côte d'Ivoire) and Mexico were established on 13 November 1975.[1] In 1981, Ivory Coast opened an embassy in Mexico City, however, the embassy was closed in 1990 for financial reasons.[2] In 1981, Ivorian Foreign Minister Simeon Aké paid a visit to Mexico to attend the North-South Summit in Cancún.[2]
In December 2013, Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto, while traveling to South Africa to attend the funeral for Nelson Mandela, made a stopover in Ivory Coast. President Peña Nieto was received at the airport by the Ivorian Minister of Petroleum and Energy, Adama Toungara. On his return home to Mexico from South Africa, President Peña Nieto made a second stopover in Ivory Coast and was met by the Secretary General of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Claude Dassys Beke.[4]
In February 2016, the National Autonomous University of Mexico bestowed the "UNESCO-UNAM Jaime Torres Bodet International Award" to Ivorian poet and novelist Bernard Binlin Dadié for his modern literature of the African continent.[5] In May 2019, Ivorian Foreign Minister Marcel Amon-Tanoh paid a visit to Mexico and met with Mexican Foreign Minister Marcelo Ebrard. During the visit, both nations stressed the importance of strengthening bilateral political dialogue.[6]
In 2023, both nations celebrated 48 years of diplomatic relations.[7]
High-level visits
High-level visits from Ivory Coast to Mexico[2][8][6]
Director General of ProMéxico Francisco González Díaz (2016)
Bilateral agreements
Both nations have signed a few bilateral agreements such as a Memorandum of Understanding for the Establishment of a Mechanism of Consultation in Matters of Mutual Interest (1999); Agreement on Educational and Cultural Cooperation (1999); Memorandum of Understanding between ProMéxico and the Center for the Promotion of Côte d'Ivoire investment (2016); and a Memorandum of Understanding in Academic Collaboration between both nations Ministries of Foreign Affairs (2019).[10][1][6]
Trade
In 2023, trade between Ivory Coast and Mexico totaled US$167 million.[11] Ivory Coast's main exports to Mexico include: cocoa paste, cocoa beans and powder, butter fat and oil cocoa, rubber, wood, and articles of aluminum. Mexico's main exports to Ivory Coast include: tubes and pipes of iron or steel, malt extract, fish, meat, medicines, discs, tapes and other media for sound recordings; machinery, tractors, motor cars and other vehicles.[11] Mexican multinational company Sukarne operates in Ivory Coast.[12]