Hiān-chāi ê kok-ka chí-tō-chiá lia̍t-toaⁿ
Hiān-chāi ê kok-ka chí-tō-chiá lia̍t-toaⁿ.
Liân-ha̍p-kok ê hoē-oân kap koan-chhat-oân
Colour key |
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Green cells indicate leaders whose offices constitutionally administer the executive of their respective state/government.
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Blue cells indicate de facto executive branch leaders whose offices lack de jure constitutional power.
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- Note: Names in small font generally denote acting, interim, transitional, temporary leaders, or representatives. Other notes and exceptions are provided at .
Kok-ka | Kok-ka goân-siú | Chèng-hú chí-tō-chiá |
---|---|---|
Afghanistan | choè-ko chí-tō-chiá – Hibatullah Akhundzada | tāi-lí chóng-lí – Hasan Akhund |
Albania | chóng-thóng – Bajram Begaj | chóng-lí – Edi Rama |
Algeria | chóng-thóng – Abdelmadjid Tebboune | chóng-lí – Nadir Larbaoui |
Andorra | kiōng-tông-kong – Joan Enric Vives i Sicília kiōng-tông-kong tāi-piáu – Josep Maria Mauri kiōng-tông-kong – Emmanuel Macron[lower-greek 1] kiōng-tông-kong tāi-piáu – Patrick Strzoda |
chóng-lí – Xavier Espot Zamora |
Angola | chóng-thóng – João Lourenço | |
Antigua kap Barbuda | kok-ông – Charles 3-sè[lower-greek 2] chóng-tok – Sir Rodney Williams |
chóng-lí – Gaston Browne |
Argentina | chóng-thóng – Javier Milei | |
Armenia | chóng-thóng – Vahagn Khachaturyan | chóng-lí – Nikol Pashinyan |
Ò-chiu | kok-ông – Charles 3-sè[lower-greek 2] chóng-tok – David Hurley Governor-general-designate – Sam Mostyn |
chóng-lí – Anthony Albanese |
Ò-tē-lī | chóng-thóng – Alexander Van der Bellen | chóng-lí – Karl Nehammer |
Azerbaijan | chóng-thóng – Ilham Aliyev | chóng-lí – Ali Asadov |
Bahamas | kok-ông – Charles 3-sè[lower-greek 2] chóng-tok – Dame Cynthia A. Pratt |
chóng-lí – Philip Davis |
Bahrain | Emir – Sheikh Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa | siú-siòng – Prince Salman bin Hamad Al Khalifa |
Bangladesh | chóng-thóng – Mohammed Shahabuddin | chóng-lí – Sheikh Hasina |
Barbados | chóng-thóng – Dame Sandra Mason | chóng-lí – Mia Mottley |
Belarus | Choân Belarus jîn-bîn hoē-gī chú-se̍k – Alexander Lukashenko[1] | |
chóng-thóng – Alexander Lukashenko[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Roman Golovchenko | |
Pe̍k-ní-gī | kok-ông – Filip | siú-siòng – Alexander De Croo |
Belize | kok-ông – Charles 3-sè[lower-greek 2] chóng-tok – Dame Froyla Tzalam |
chóng-lí – Johnny Briceño |
Benin | chóng-thóng – Patrice Talon | |
Bhutan | kok-ông – Jigme Khesar Namgyel Wangchuck | siú-siòng – Tshering Tobgay |
Bolivia | chóng-thóng – Luis Arce | |
Bosnia kap Herzegovina | Choè-ko Tāi-piáu – Christian Schmidt[lower-greek 4] | |
Chóng-thóng Phêng-gī-hoē[lower-greek 5] | Pō͘-tiúⁿ Phêng-gī-hoē gī-tiúⁿ – Borjana Krišto | |
sêng-oân:
| ||
Botswana | chóng-thóng – Mokgweetsi Masisi | |
Pa-se | chóng-thóng – Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva | |
Bûn-lâi | Sultan, siú-siòng – Hassanal Bolkiah | |
Bulgaria | chóng-thóng – Rumen Radev | Tāi-lí chóng-lí – Dimitar Glavchev |
Burkina Faso | Patriotic Movement for Safeguard and Restoration chú-se̍k – Ibrahim Traoré | |
lîm-sî chóng-thóng – Ibrahim Traoré | lîm-sî chóng-lí – Apollinaire Kyélem | |
Burundi | chóng-thóng – Évariste Ndayishimiye[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Gervais Ndirakobuca |
Kán-po͘-chē | Jîn-bîn Tóng chú-se̍k – Hun Sen[2] | |
kok-ông – Norodom Sihamoni | siú-siòng – Hun Manet | |
Cameroon | chóng-thóng – Paul Biya[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Joseph Ngute |
Canada | kok-ông – Charles 3-sè[lower-greek 2] chóng-tok – Mary Simon |
chóng-lí – Justin Trudeau |
Cabo Verde | chóng-thóng – José Maria Neves | chóng-lí – Ulisses Correia e Silva |
Tiong-hui Kiōng-hô-kok | chóng-thóng – Faustin-Archange Touadéra[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Félix Moloua |
Chad | chóng-thóng – Mahamat Déby | chóng-lí – Allamaye Halina |
Chile | chóng-thóng – Gabriel Boric | |
Tiong-kok | Tiong Kiōng chóng-su-kì – Si̍p Kīn-pêng | |
kok-ka chú-se̍k – Si̍p Kīn-pêng | Chóng-lí – Lí Kiông | |
Colombia | chóng-thóng – Gustavo Petro | |
Comoros | chóng-thóng – Azali Assoumani | |
Congo Bîn-chú Kiōng-hô-kok | chóng-thóng – Félix Tshisekedi | chóng-lí – Judith Tuluka |
Congo, Republic of the | chóng-thóng – Denis Sassou Nguesso | chóng-lí – Anatole Collinet Makosso |
Costa Rica | chóng-thóng – Rodrigo Chaves Robles | |
Croatia | chóng-thóng – Zoran Milanović | chóng-lí – Andrej Plenković |
Cuba | Tóng tē-it su-kì – Miguel Díaz-Canel | |
kok-ka chú-se̍k – Miguel Díaz-Canel | chóng-lí – Manuel Marrero Cruz | |
Ku-pí-lō͘ | chóng-thóng – Nikos Christodoulides | |
Chesko | chóng-thóng – Petr Pavel | chóng-lí – Petr Fiala |
Tan-be̍h | kok-ông – Frederik 10-sè | siú-siòng – Mette Frederiksen |
Djibouti | chóng-thóng – Ismaïl Omar Guelleh[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Abdoulkader Kamil Mohamed |
Dominica | chóng-thóng – Sylvanie Burton | chóng-lí – Roosevelt Skerrit |
Dominica Kiōng-hô-kok | chóng-thóng – Luis Abinader | |
Tang Timor | chóng-thóng – José Ramos-Horta | chóng-lí – Xanana Gusmão |
Ecuador | chóng-thóng – Daniel Noboa | |
Ai-ki̍p | chóng-thóng – Abdel Fattah el-Sisi | chóng-lí – Mostafa Madbouly |
El Salvador | chóng-thóng – Nayib Bukele | |
Tāi-lí chóng-thóng – Claudia Rodríguez de Guevara | ||
Chhiah-tō Guinea | chóng-thóng – Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Manuela Roka Botey |
Eritrea | chóng-thóng – Isaias Afwerki | |
Estonia | chóng-thóng – Alar Karis | chóng-lí – Kaja Kallas |
Eswatini | kok-ông – Mswati 3-sè | siú-siòng – Russell Dlamini |
thài-hiō – Ntfombi | ||
Ethiopia | chóng-thóng – Sahle-Work Zewde | chóng-lí – Abiy Ahmed |
Fiji | chóng-thóng – Ratu Wiliame Katonivere | chóng-lí – Sitiveni Rabuka |
Hun-lân | chóng-thóng – Alexander Stubb | chóng-lí – Petteri Orpo |
Hoat-kok | chóng-thóng – Emmanuel Macron[lower-greek 1] | chóng-lí – Gabriel Attal |
Gabon | Chairman of the Committee for the Transition and Restoration of Institutions – Brice Oligui Nguema | |
Transitional chóng-thóng – Brice Oligui Nguema[3] | Interim chóng-lí – Raymond Ndong Sima | |
Gambia, The | chóng-thóng – Adama Barrow | |
Gruzia | chóng-thóng – Salome Zourabichvili | chóng-lí – Irakli Kobakhidze |
Tek-kok | chóng-thóng – Frank-Walter Steinmeier | chóng-lí – Olaf Scholz |
Ghana | chóng-thóng – Nana Akufo-Addo | |
Hi-lia̍p | chóng-thóng – Katerina Sakellaropoulou | chóng-lí – Kyriakos Mitsotakis |
Grenada | kok-ông – Charles 3-sè[lower-greek 2] chóng-tok – Dame Cécile La Grenade |
chóng-lí – Dickon Mitchell |
Guatemala | chóng-thóng – Bernardo Arévalo | |
Guinea | Chairman of the National Committee of Reconciliation and Development – Mamady Doumbouya | |
Interim chóng-thóng – Mamady Doumbouya | chóng-lí – Bah Oury | |
Guinea-Bissau | chóng-thóng – Umaro Sissoco Embaló | chóng-lí – Rui Duarte de Barros |
Guyana | chóng-thóng – Irfaan Ali[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Mark Phillips |
Haiti | chóng-thóng – Transitional Presidential Council[lower-greek 6] | tāi-lí chóng-lí – Vacant |
Edgard Leblanc Fils (President) | ||
Other members:
| ||
Honduras | chóng-thóng – Xiomara Castro | |
Hông-gâ-lī | chóng-thóng – Tamás Sulyok | chóng-lí – Viktor Orbán |
Peng-tó | chóng-thóng – Guðni Th. Jóhannesson | chóng-lí – Bjarni Benediktsson |
Ìn-tō͘ | chóng-thóng – Droupadi Murmu | chóng-lí – Narendra Modi |
Ìn-nî | chóng-thóng – Joko Widodo | |
President-elect – Prabowo Subianto | ||
Iran | chòe-ko léng-tō-jîn – Ali Khamenei[lower-greek 7] | tāi-lí chóng-thóng – Mohammad Mokhber |
Iraq | chóng-thóng – Abdul Latif Rashid | chóng-lí – Mohammed Shia' Al Sudani |
Ài-ní-lân | chóng-thóng – Michael D. Higgins | chóng-lí – Simon Harris |
Í-sek-lia̍t | chóng-thóng – Isaac Herzog | chóng-lí – Benjamin Netanyahu |
Í-tāi-lī | chóng-thóng – Sergio Mattarella | chóng-lí – Giorgia Meloni |
Côte d'Ivoire | chóng-thóng – Alassane Ouattara[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Robert Beugré Mambé |
Jamaica | kok-ông – Charles 3-sè[lower-greek 2] chóng-tok – Sir Patrick Allen |
chóng-lí – Andrew Holness |
Ji̍t-pún | Thian-hông – Naruhito[lower-greek 8] | Loē-koh Chóng-lí Tāi-sîn – Kisida Humio |
Iok-tàn | kok-ông – Abdullah 2-sè | siú-siòng – Bisher Al-Khasawneh |
Kazakhstan | chóng-thóng – Kassym-Jomart Tokayev[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Oljas Bektenov |
Kenya | chóng-thóng – William Ruto | |
Kiribati | chóng-thóng – Taneti Maamau | |
Kuwait | Emir – Sheikh Mishal Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah | siú-siòng – Ahmad Al-Abdullah Al-Sabah |
Kyrgyzstan | chóng-thóng – Sadyr Japarov[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Akylbek Japarov |
Láu-o | Jîn-bîn Kek-bēng Tóng chóng-su-kì – Thongloun Sisoulith | |
kok-ka chú-se̍k – Thongloun Sisoulith | chóng-lí – Sonexay Siphandone | |
Latvia | chóng-thóng – Edgars Rinkēvičs | chóng-lí – Evika Siliņa |
Lī-pa-lùn | chóng-thóng – Vacant | chóng-lí – Najib Mikati |
Lesotho | kok-ông – Letsie 3-sè | siú-siòng – Sam Matekane |
Liberia | chóng-thóng – Joseph Boakai | |
Libya | Chóng-thóng Phêng-gī-hoē chú-se̍k – Mohamed al-Menfi | chóng-lí – Abdul Hamid Dbeibeh |
Liechtenstein | Kong – Hans-Adam II | siú-siòng – Daniel Risch |
Sia̍p-chèng – Hereditary Prince Alois | ||
Lietuva | chóng-thóng – Gitanas Nausėda | chóng-lí – Ingrida Šimonytė |
Luxembourg | Kong – Henri | siú-siòng – Luc Frieden |
Madagascar | chóng-thóng – Andry Rajoelina | chóng-lí – Christian Ntsay |
Malawi | chóng-thóng – Lazarus Chakwera | |
Má-lâi-se-a | Yang di-Pertuan Agong – Ibrahim Iskandar | chóng-lí – Anwar Ibrahim |
Maldives | chóng-thóng – Mohamed Muizzu | |
Mali | Interim chóng-thóng – Assimi Goïta[lower-greek 3] | Interim chóng-lí – Choguel Kokalla Maïga |
Malta | chóng-thóng – Myriam Spiteri Debono | chóng-lí – Robert Abela |
Marshall Kûn-tó | chóng-thóng – Hilda Heine | |
Mauritania | chóng-thóng – Mohamed Ould Ghazouani | chóng-lí – Mohamed Ould Bilal |
Mauritius | chóng-thóng – Prithvirajsing Roopun | chóng-lí – Pravind Jugnauth |
Be̍k-se-ko | chóng-thóng – Andrés Manuel López Obrador | |
Micronesia | chóng-thóng – Wesley Simina | |
Moldova | chóng-thóng – Maia Sandu | chóng-lí – Dorin Recean |
Monaco | Kong – Albert II | Kok-bū Tāi-sîn – Pierre Dartout |
Bông-kó͘ | chóng-thóng – Ukhnaagiin Khürelsükh | chóng-lí – Luvsannamsrain Oyun-Erdene |
Montenegro | chóng-thóng – Jakov Milatović | chóng-lí – Milojko Spajić |
Morocco | Kok-ông – Mohammed 6-sè | siú-siòng – Aziz Akhannouch |
Mozambique | chóng-thóng – Filipe Nyusi[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Adriano Maleiane |
Bián-tiān | Kok-ka Hêng-chèng Phêng-gī-hoē gī-tiúⁿ – Min Aung Hlaing | |
Tāi-lí chóng-thóng – Myint Swe | chóng-lí – Min Aung Hlaing | |
Namibia | chóng-thóng – Nangolo Mbumba[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Saara Kuugongelwa |
Nauru | chóng-thóng – David Adeang | |
Nepal | chóng-thóng – Ram Chandra Poudel | chóng-lí – Pushpa Kamal Dahal |
Hô-lân | kok-ông – Willem-Alexander | siú-siòng – Mark Rutte |
New Zealand | kok-ông – Charles 3-sè[lower-greek 2] chóng-tok – Dame Cindy Kiro[lower-greek 9] |
chóng-lí – Christopher Luxon |
Nicaragua | chóng-thóng – Daniel Ortega | |
Niger | President of the National Council for the Safeguard of the Homeland – Abdourahamane Tchiani | chóng-lí – Ali Lamine Zeine[8] |
Nigeria | chóng-thóng – Bola Tinubu | |
Tiâu-sián Bîn-chú-chú-gī Jîn-bîn Kiōng-hô-kok | Tiâu-sián Lô-tōng Tóng tē 1 su-kì – Kim Jong-un | |
Kok-bū Úi-oân-hōe Úi-oân-tiúⁿ – Kim Jong-un | loē-koh chóng-lí – Kim Tok-hun | |
Pak Macedonia | chóng-thóng – Gordana Siljanovska-Davkova | chóng-lí – Talat Xhaferi |
Prime minister-designate – Hristijan Mickoski | ||
Ná-ui | kok-ông – Harald 5-sè | siú-siòng – Jonas Gahr Støre |
Oman | Sultan kap siú-siòng – Haitham bin Tariq | |
Pakistan | chóng-thóng – Asif Ali Zardari | chóng-lí – Shehbaz Sharif |
Palau | chóng-thóng – Surangel Whipps Jr. | |
Palestine Kok | chóng-thóng – Mahmoud Abbas | chóng-lí – Mohammad Mustafa |
Panama | chóng-thóng – Laurentino Cortizo | |
President-elect – José Raúl Mulino | ||
Papua New Guinea | kok-ông – Charles 3-sè[lower-greek 2] chóng-tok – Sir Bob Dadae |
chóng-lí – James Marape |
Paraguay | chóng-thóng – Santiago Peña | |
Peru | chóng-thóng – Dina Boluarte[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Gustavo Adrianzén |
Hui-li̍p-pin | chóng-thóng – Bongbong Marcos | |
Pho-lân | chóng-thóng – Andrzej Duda | chóng-lí – Donald Tusk |
Phû-tô-gâ | chóng-thóng – Marcelo Rebelo de Sousa | chóng-lí – Luís Montenegro |
Qatar | Emir – Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani | siú-siòng – Sheikh Mohammed bin Abdulrahman bin Jassim Al Thani |
Romania | chóng-thóng – Klaus Iohannis | chóng-lí – Marcel Ciolacu |
Lō͘-se-a | chóng-thóng – Vladimir Putin | chóng-lí – Mikhail Mishustin |
Rwanda | chóng-thóng – Paul Kagame[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Édouard Ngirente |
Saint Kitts kap Nevis | kok-ông – Charles 3-sè[lower-greek 2] chóng-tok – Dame Marcella Liburd |
chóng-lí – Terrance Drew |
Saint Lucia | kok-ông – Charles 3-sè[lower-greek 2] Tāi-lí chóng-tok – Errol Charles |
chóng-lí – Philip J. Pierre |
Saint Vincent kap Grenadines | kok-ông – Charles 3-sè[lower-greek 2] chóng-tok – Dame Susan Dougan |
chóng-lí – Ralph Gonsalves |
Samoa | O le Ao o le Malo – Afioga Tuimalealiʻifano Vaʻaletoʻa Sualauvi 2-sè | chóng-lí – Fiamē Naomi Mataʻafa |
San Marino | chip-chèng-koan[lower-greek 10] – Alessandro Rossi | Secretary for Foreign and Political Affairs – Luca Beccari |
chip-chèng-koan[lower-greek 10] – Milena Gasperoni | ||
São Tomé kap Príncipe | chóng-thóng – Carlos Vila Nova | chóng-lí – Patrice Trovoada |
Saudi A-la-pek | kok-ông – Salman | siú-siòng – Mohammed bin Salman |
Senegal | chóng-thóng – Bassirou Diomaye Faye[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Ousmane Sonko |
Serbia | chóng-thóng – Aleksandar Vučić | chóng-lí – Miloš Vučević |
Seychelles | chóng-thóng – Wavel Ramkalawan | |
Sierra Leone | chóng-thóng – Julius Maada Bio[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – David Moinina Sengeh |
Sin-ka-pho | chóng-thóng – Tharman Shanmugaratnam | chóng-lí – N̂g Sûn-châi |
Slovakia | chóng-thóng – Zuzana Čaputová President-elect – Peter Pellegrini |
chóng-lí – Robert Fico |
Slovenia | chóng-thóng – Nataša Pirc Musar | chóng-lí – Robert Golob |
Só͘-lô-bûn Kûn-tó | kok-ông – Charles 3-sè[lower-greek 2] chóng-tok – Sir David Vunagi |
chóng-lí – Jeremiah Manele |
Somalia | chóng-thóng – Hassan Sheikh Mohamud | chóng-lí – Hamza Abdi Barre |
Lâm-hui-kok | chóng-thóng – Cyril Ramaphosa | |
Tāi-hân Bîn-kok | chóng-thóng – Yoon Suk-yeol[lower-greek 3] | |
Lâm Sudan | chóng-thóng – Salva Kiir Mayardit | |
Se-pan-gâ | kok-ông – Felipe 6-sè | siú-siòng – Pedro Sánchez |
Sri Lanka | chóng-thóng – Ranil Wickremesinghe[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Dinesh Gunawardena |
Sudan | Transitional Sovereignty Council[lower-greek 11] | Tāi-lí chóng-lí – Osman Hussein |
Abdel Fattah al-Burhan (Chairman) | ||
Suriname | chóng-thóng – Chan Santokhi | |
Sūi-tián | kok-ông – Carl 16-sè Gustaf | siú-siòng – Ulf Kristersson |
Sūi-se | Liân-pang Phêng-gī-hōe[lower-greek 12] | |
Liân-pang Phêng-gī-hōe sêng-oân:
| ||
Su-lī-a | chóng-thóng – Bashar al-Assad[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Hussein Arnous |
Tajikistan | chóng-thóng – Emomali Rahmon[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Kokhir Rasulzoda |
Tanzania | chóng-thóng – Samia Suluhu Hassan[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Kassim Majaliwa |
Thài-kok | kok-ông – Maha Vajiralongkorn | chóng-lí – Srettha Thavisin |
Togo | chóng-thóng – Faure Gnassingbé[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Victoire Tomegah Dogbé |
Tonga | kok-ông – Tupou 6-sè | siú-siòng – Siaosi Sovaleni |
Trinidad kap Tobago | chóng-thóng – Christine Kangaloo | chóng-lí – Keith Rowley |
Tunisia | chóng-thóng – Kaïs Saïed[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Ahmed Hachani |
Thó͘-ní-kî | chóng-thóng – Recep Tayyip Erdoğan | |
Turkmenistan | Jîn-bîn Gī-hoē – Gurbanguly Berdimuhamedow[14] | |
chóng-thóng – Serdar Berdimuhamedow | ||
Tuvalu | kok-ông – Charles 3-sè[lower-greek 2] chóng-tok – Sir Tofiga Vaevalu Falani |
chóng-lí – Feleti Teo |
Uganda | chóng-thóng – Yoweri Museveni[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Robinah Nabbanja |
Ukraina | chóng-thóng – Volodymyr Zelenskyy | chóng-lí – Denys Shmyhal |
A-la-pek Liân-ha̍p Thâu-lâng-kok | chóng-thóng – Sheikh Mohamed bin Zayed Al Nahyan | siú-siòng – Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum |
Liân-ha̍p Ông-kok | kok-ông – Charles 3-sè | siú-siòng – Rishi Sunak |
Bí-kok | chóng-thóng – Joe Biden | |
Uruguay | chóng-thóng – Luis Lacalle Pou | |
Uzbekistan | chóng-thóng – Shavkat Mirziyoyev[lower-greek 3] | chóng-lí – Abdulla Aripov |
Vanuatu | chóng-thóng – Nikenike Vurobaravu | chóng-lí – Charlot Salwai |
Vaticano (Sèng-chō) | Kàu-hông – Franciscus | Chhī Kok Úi-oân-hoē chú-se̍k – Cardinal Fernando Vérgez Alzaga |
Venezuela | chóng-thóng – Nicolás Maduro | |
Oa̍t-lâm | Oa̍t Kiōng chóng su-kì – Nguyễn Phú Trọng | |
kok-ka chú-se̍k – Tô Lâm | chóng-lí – Phạm Minh Chính | |
Yemen | chóng-thóng úi-oân-hoē chú-se̍k – Rashad al-Alimi | chóng-lí – Ahmad Awad bin Mubarak |
Zambia | chóng-thóng – Hakainde Hichilema | |
Zimbabwe | chóng-thóng – Emmerson Mnangagwa |
Kî-thaⁿ kok-ka
Liân-ha̍p-kok hoē-oân ê liân-hē-pang:
liân-hē-pang | kok-ka | Kok-ka goân-siú | Chèng-hú chí-tō-chiá |
---|---|---|---|
Cook Kûn-tó | New Zealand | kok-ông – Charles 3-sè[lower-greek 13] kok-ông tāi-piáu – Sir Tom Marsters |
chóng-lí – Mark Brown |
Niue | New Zealand | kok-ông – Charles 3-sè[lower-greek 13] kok-ông tāi-piáu – Dame Cindy Kiro[lower-greek 9] |
chóng-lí – Dalton Tagelagi |
M̄-sī Liân-ha̍p-kok ê hoē-oân-kok:
Kok-ka | Kok-ka goân-siú | Chèng-hú chí-tō-chiá |
---|---|---|
Abkhazia | chóng-thóng – Aslan Bzhania | chóng-lí – Aleksander Ankvab |
Tiong-hoâ Bîn-kok (Tâi-oân) | chóng-thóng – Lōa Chheng-tek | Hêng-chèng-īⁿ-tiúⁿ – Toh Êng-thài |
Kosovo | chóng-thóng – Vjosa Osmani | chóng-lí – Albin Kurti |
Pak Ku-pí-lō͘ | chóng-thóng – Ersin Tatar | chóng-lí – Ünal Üstel |
Sahrawi A-la-pek Bîn-chú Kiōng-hô-kok | General Secretary of the Polisario Front – Brahim Ghali | |
chóng-thóng – Brahim Ghali | chóng-lí – Bouchraya Hammoudi Bayoun | |
Lâm Ossetia | chóng-thóng – Alan Gagloyev | chóng-lí – Konstantin Dzhussoyev |
Somaliland | chóng-thóng – Muse Bihi Abdi | |
Transnistria | chóng-thóng – Vadim Krasnoselsky | chóng-lí – Aleksander Rozenberg |
Chù-kha
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 The President of France and the French Co-Prince of Andorra are positions held by the same person.
- ↑ 2.00 2.01 2.02 2.03 2.04 2.05 2.06 2.07 2.08 2.09 2.10 2.11 2.12 2.13 Charles III is separately and equally monarch of 15 sovereign states known collectively as the Commonwealth realms. In each of these states (with the exception of the United Kingdom, where he permanently resides), he is represented at the national level by a governor-general.
- ↑ 3.00 3.01 3.02 3.03 3.04 3.05 3.06 3.07 3.08 3.09 3.10 3.11 3.12 3.13 3.14 3.15 3.16 3.17 3.18 3.19 3.20 3.21 3.22 3.23 3.24 3.25 In this state, the president is both head of state and head of government; the office of prime minister may exist in these states, but it does not direct executive power—nor does the Kyrgyzstani Chairman of the Cabinet of Ministers, the Peruvian President of the Council of Ministers, or the Sierra Leonean Chief Minister.
- ↑ The high representative is an international civilian overseer of the Dayton Agreement with authority to dismiss elected and non-elected officials and enact legislation.
- ↑ The three-member Bosnian presidency is the head of state collectively.
- ↑ The council will exercise certain presidential powers until a new president is elected or until February 7, 2026, whichever comes first. The presidency has been vacant since the assassination of Jovenel Moïse in 2021.[4][5][6][7]
- ↑ According to articles 89 to 91 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran, the Supreme Leader of Iran is the head of state, and the President is the head of government. The President is required to gain the Supreme Leader's official approval before being sworn in before Parliament, and the Supreme Leader also has the power to dismiss the elected President at any time.
- ↑ The constitution of Japan does not define a formal head of state, but the Emperor by unwritten constitutional convention fulfills the functions and duties of this role.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 The Governor-General of New Zealand and the King's Representative of Niue are positions held by the same person.
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 The Captain Regent representing the party with a plurality of seats in the legislature of San Marino, the Grand and General Council, exercises more legislative power than the Captain Regent belonging to the opposition.
- ↑ The Transitional Sovereignty Council is the collective head of state of Sudan per the 2019 Draft Constitutional Declaration. While the council was intended to be a unity government incorporating civilian and military elements that used consensus decision making, Chairman Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, who is also Commander-in-Chief of the Sudanese Armed Forces, has monopolized power.[9][10][11]
- ↑ The seven-member Swiss Federal Council is collectively head of state and government. As a party to the Council, the President serves solely in a primus inter pares capacity for one year.
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 Charles III is head of state of the Cook Islands and Niue in his capacity as King in Right of New Zealand. He is represented in each of these states by a King's Representative.
Chham-khó
- ↑ Rudenka, Arsien (16 April 2024). "У Беларусі фармуецца УНС. Топ-7 простых пытанняў пра новы дзяржаўны орган" [The ABPA is being formed in Belarus: Top 7 simple questions about the new state organ]. Belsat TV (ēng Belarusian). 12 May 2024 khòaⁿ--ê.
- ↑ Cai, Derek; Head, Jonathan (7 August 2023). "Cambodia: PM's son Hun Manet appointed next ruler in royal formality". Singapore: BBC News. 7 August 2023 khòaⁿ--ê.
Hun Sen will however retain leadership of the ruling Cambodian People's Party - a position political analysts say still gives him ultimate control.
Pang-bô͘:* Murphy, Matt (6 August 2023). "Hun Sen: Cambodia election result confirms expected win for PM". BBC News. 7 August 2023 khòaⁿ--ê.[Hun Sen] is expected to become president of the Senate early next year and will serve as acting head of state when King Norodom Sihamoni is abroad.
- ↑ "General Nguema appointed transitional president of Gabon following coup". Anadolu Agency. Kigali. 30 August 2023. 31 August 2023 khòaⁿ--ê.
- ↑ "Haiti's Constitution of 1987 with Amendments through 2012" (PDF). Constitute Project. 20 May 2023 khòaⁿ--ê.
- ↑ Fatton, Robert (23 July 2021). "Will Haitians get the chance to determine their future — without foreign interference?". The Washington Post. 20 May 2023 khòaⁿ--ê.
On Tuesday, Henry was sworn in, pledging to hold new elections in 120 days. For now, Haiti has no president[...].
- ↑ Sullivan, Becky (18 January 2023). "As its only remaining elected officials depart, Haiti reaches a breaking point". NPR. 20 May 2023 khòaⁿ--ê.
The constitutional mandate of Haiti's de facto ruler, Prime Minister Ariel Henry — which some viewed as questionable from the start, as he was never technically sworn in — ended more than a year ago. The country has had no president since its last one, Jovenel Moïse, was assassinated in 2021.
- ↑ Mendonca, Duarte (25 April 2024). "Haiti's prime minister resigns as council sworn in to lead political transition in violence-ravaged nation". CNN. 25 April 2024 khòaⁿ--ê.
- ↑ "Niger military names 21-person cabinet ahead of key West African summit". Al Jazeera. 10 August 2023. 14 August 2023 khòaⁿ--ê.
- ↑ "Sudan's Constitution of 2019" (PDF). 23 March 2023 khòaⁿ--ê.
- ↑ "Sudan's reinstated PM Hamdok promises a path to democracy". Al Jazeera. 22 November 2021. 22 March 2023 khòaⁿ--ê.
The 14-point deal between Hamdok and the military, signed in the presidential palace in Khartoum on Sunday, also provides for the release of all political prisoners detained during the coup and stipulates that a 2019 constitutional declaration be the basis for a political transition, according to details read out on state television.
- ↑ Olewe, Dickens (20 February 2023). "Mohamed 'Hemeti' Dagalo: Top Sudan military figure says coup was a mistake". BBC News. 23 March 2023 khòaⁿ--ê.
- ↑ "Sudan coup leader restores restructured Sovereignty Council". Radio Dabanga. Khartoum. 11 November 2021. 26 March 2023 khòaⁿ--ê.
- ↑ "Sudan's Burhan dismisses Hemedti of his position". Al Bawaba (ēng Eng-gí). 2023-05-19 khòaⁿ--ê.
- ↑ "Turkmenistan's president expands his father's power". Associated Press. Ashgabat. 22 January 2023. 29 January 2023 khòaⁿ--ê.