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中国法律学者凌岩女士受聘在联合国卢旺达国际法庭工作,繁忙之余,特为本刊撰写此文,以飨读者。 大使接见 奔波了很多天,终于要启程了。行前,坦桑尼亚驻华使馆的大使招见了我。“要办坦桑尼亚的签证都要和大使谈话吗?”我带着疑惑的口气问通知我的外交部工作人员。“一般都没有的。”“他要跟我谈什么呢?”显然我问了一句废话,谁会知道大使会跟我谈什么呢。 大使很随和,他说,当工作人员向他请示给我发签证时,他知道我要去他的国家,为当地的和平作贡献,而且是个女士,因此他一定要约见我。当他知道我是个法律工
Ms. Ling Yan, a Chinese legal scholar, was hired to work at the UN International Tribunal for Rwanda and was busy writing this essay to readers. The Ambassador met a lot of days, finally leaving. Before the trip, the ambassador of the Tanzanian Embassy in China recalled me. “Do you want to talk to the ambassador about your visa in Tanzania?” I asked my Foreign Office staff with questions of doubt. “I do not usually have one.” “What does he want to talk to me?” Clearly I asked a nonsense, who knew what the ambassador would talk to me about? The ambassador was very easy-going. He said that when the staff member asked me for a visa, he knew I was going to his country and contributed to the peace in the area and was a woman, so he must have an appointment with me. When he knew I was a legal worker