-
Russia, North Korea connect road bridge ahead of summer opening
-
'Strangled': Pakistan faces economic imperative in Iran war peace push
-
Michael Jackson fans pack Hollywood for biopic premiere
-
Turkey arrests 110 coal miners on hunger strike
-
Associated British Foods to spin off Primark clothes brand
-
Pope visits Eq. Guinea on last stop of Africa tour
-
Hello Kitty's parent company to make own video games
-
Di Matteo says 'vital' for faltering Chelsea to add experience
-
Ex-Spurs star Davids condemns 'lack of quality, lack of management'
-
Turkmenistan, the gas giant increasingly dependent on China
-
Romanian AI music sensation Lolita sparks racism debate
-
Timberwolves battle back to stun Nuggets in NBA playoffs
-
Eta appointment 'no surprise' for Union Berlin's ascendant women
-
Democrats eye Virginia gains in war with Trump over US voting map
-
Tourists trickle back to Kashmir, one year after deadly attack
-
Inside the world of ultra-luxury wedding cakes
-
Chinese AI circuit board maker soars on Hong Kong debut
-
Oil prices dip, most stocks rise on lingering Iran peace hopes
-
Tim Cook's time as Apple chief marked by profit absent awe
-
Mitchell, Harden shine as Cavs down Raptors for 2-0 series lead
-
El Salvador's missing thousands buried by official indifference
-
Trump's Fed chair pick to face lawmakers at key confirmation hearing
-
PGA Tour to scrap Hawaii opening events from 2027
-
Amazon invests another $5 bn in Anthropic
-
Israel PM vows 'harsh action' against soldier vandalising Jesus statue in Lebanon
-
Wembanyama wins NBA defensive player of the year
-
'The Devil Wears Prada 2' stars reunite for glamorous premiere
-
El Salvador holds mass trial of nearly 500 alleged gang members
-
Apple's Tim Cook to step down as CEO in September
-
West Ham's draw at Palace relegates Wolves, piles pressure on Spurs
-
Canadian tourist killed in Mexico archaeological site shooting
-
Wolves relegated from Premier League
-
Oil jumps on Hormuz tensions, stocks mostly retreat
-
Colombian environmental activist honored amid threats and exile
-
Gun battle traps more than 200 tourists at Rio viewpoint
-
Alcaraz may skip French Open rather than rush injury comeback
-
Top US court to hear case of Catholic schools excluded from state funding
-
Trump Fed chair pick to vow interest rate independence at key hearing
-
EU to host Taliban officials for talks on deporting Afghans
-
Blue Origin probing rocket's failure to deliver satellite
-
Wembanyama 'changing the game as we speak', says Nowitzki
-
Swiss football club turn down Kanye West concert approach
-
Leicester fairytale turns sour as relegation to third tier looms
-
Pope Leo blasts 'exploitation' as he wrap up tour of resource-rich Angola
-
Varma ton revives Mumbai's IPL hopes with win over Gujarat
-
Formula One makes rule changes after drivers' criticism
-
Singer D4vd charged with murder over teen's body found in Tesla
-
UK PM denies misleading MPs, says officials hid Mandelson info
-
Tit-for-tat blockades once again cripple traffic in Hormuz
-
Cafu says 2026 World Cup is perfect time for Brazil to win again
Washington's abandoned embassies have stories to tell
In Washington's embassy district, years' worth of wildly overgrown vegetation outside an empty building was finally pruned away in September as the flag of Syria was raised.
The symbolic reopening of the compound after 11 years of closure serves as a reminder that a number of buildings in the area of Washington called Kalorama are in a state of sad abandon, thanks to the violent jolts of world diplomacy.
Since the embassy of Afghanistan closed a few months after the Taliban returned to power in 2021, its mailbox outside has been filled with yellowing newspapers.
And not far away, weeds grow in the parking lot of a mansion that used to house the Russian trade delegation in Washington. The State Department ordered it closed in reprisal for Russia's alleged attempt to interfere in the 2016 US presidential election.
The Syrian Embassy was shut down by the US government in 2014 after three years of civil war. Now, in principle at least, it can reopen.
The Trump administration announced this on November 10 after a White House visit by Syria's new president Ahmed al-Sharaa, the formerly blacklisted jihadist who led the ouster of Assad in late 2024.
- Angry neighbors -
But the building is in such bad shape it could take years to get it up and running again, former Syrian diplomat Bassam Barabandi told AFP.
Barabandi left his post in 2013 after it emerged that he had secretly made passports for people opposed to the Assad regime.
He recalled that even back then, before he left, areas of the building had been partially condemned.
"So, just imagine," he said, of its state now.
Down the street, the overgrown hedges outside the abandoned ambassador's residence were sometimes trimmed by gardeners employed by wealthy neighbors irked by the unsightliness.
A utility company notice of gas being cut off still hangs from the front door knob.
A few buildings away, near a mansion owned by Barack and Michelle Obama, the embassy of Afghanistan stands.
"So one day it was there. The next day it just was, it was gone," said US postal worker Trina Thompson, who has done rounds in the neighborhood for 25 years.
That was in March 2022 and then-deputy ambassador Abdul Hadi Nejrabi watched it all. It was he who handed the keys to the embassy back to the US government.
Kabul had fallen to the Taliban seven months earlier and Hadi Nejrabi and his diplomatic colleagues represented a government that no longer existed.
Soon their bank accounts were frozen and they were no longer paid.
The embassy was still offering consular services to Afghan citizens but "we reached a point the State Department officially asked us to close the embassy and just hand over the keys," Hadi Nejrabi told AFP.
A team from the State Department's Office of Foreign Missions went to the embassy to oversee the closure.
"We checked every room, and then we just came out and we locked the door and I just gave the key," the former diplomat said.
It is this State Department section which is responsible for the upkeep of other countries' embassies.
Under the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations, states are supposed to respect and protect other countries' embassies in cases where diplomatic relations are severed.
- 'Border on theft' -
The State Department lists 29 such buildings which it is supposed to be looking after: three associated with Afghanistan, six with Venezuela, and 11 with Iran -- these three countries have no relations with the United States now. But the list also features three buildings for China and six Russian ones.
The buildings now off limits to the Russians include consulates in San Francisco and Seattle and a massive compound in Maryland.
They were closed in a spat of tit for tat reprisals after the 2016 election won by Donald Trump.
The Russian Embassy told AFP these closures are illegal under the Vienna Convention and "border on theft."
"While property rights of the Russian Federation for these six objects are recognized and have not been challenged by the US side, continuously denying access for Russian diplomats even to inspect the grounds and buildings is preposterous, cementing the bilateral relations' 'toxic legacy' of previous years."
Elsewhere in Kalorama the embassy of Iran has stood empty since 1980, after the Islamic revolution that ousted the US-backed shah.
The squat, blue-domed building used to host fancy receptions for the Washington diplomatic crowd. But unlike the Syrian embassy, it looks far from reopening as US-Iran tensions remain fierce.
P.Vogel--VB