List of ambassadors of Sweden to Burkina Faso

In 1958 Upper Volta became an autonomous republic in the French Community, and achieved independence as the Republic of Upper Volta on 5 August 1960.[1] Ragnar Edenman, serving as interim Swedish Minister for Foreign Affairs, sent a congratulatory telegram to President Maurice Yaméogo of Upper Volta.[2] On 4 August 1984 the country changed its name from Upper Volta to Burkina Faso.Sweden's first ambassador accredited in Ouagadougou was Karl Henrik Andersson, who held a dual accreditation from the Swedish embassy in Abidjan, Ivory Coast, starting in 1964.[6] In 2021, Sweden's first resident ambassador in Ouagadougou was appointed.
Lesser coat of armsKingdom of SwedenMinistry for Foreign AffairsHis or Her ExcellencyMinister for Foreign AffairsOuagadougouBurkina FasoGovernment of SwedenTerm lengthKarl Henrik Anderssonhead of state of Burkina FasoFrench Upper VoltaFrench West AfricaFrench CommunityRepublic of Upper VoltaRagnar EdenmanMaurice YaméogoAbidjanStockholmSwedish ambassador in Bamakodual accreditationchargé d'affairesResident/Non residentAmbassadorAccredited fromKarl-Anders WollterInga Björk-KlevbyBamakoChargé d'affaires ad interimEva EmnéusHead of missionBurkina Faso–Sweden relationsSvenska DagbladetDagens NyheterSELIBRLinkedInFacebookAlgeriaAngolaArgentinaAustraliaAustriaBangladeshBelarusBelgiumBoliviaBrazilBulgariaCanadaColombiaDemocratic Republic of the CongoCzech RepublicDenmarkEthiopiaFinlandFranceGermanyGreeceHungaryIcelandIndonesiaIrelandIsraelKazakhstanLebanonLiberiaLiechtensteinMexicoMoroccoNetherlandsNew ZealandNigeriaNorth KoreaNorwayPakistanPhilippinesPolandPortugalRomaniaRussiaRwandaSaudi ArabiaSerbiaSingaporeSouth AfricaSouth KoreaSwitzerlandTanzaniaThailandTunisiaTurkeyUgandaUkraineUnited Arab EmiratesUnited KingdomUnited StatesVenezuelaVietnamZambiaCzechoslovakiaSoviet UnionYugoslavia