Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Atul Keshap comfirmed as new US Ambassador to SL

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Indian-American, Atul Keshap, has been confirmed as the U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka and Maldives, becoming the second diplomat of Indian origin to be posted to the region after Richard Rahul Verma.

Mr. Keshap (44), a former official at the US Embassy in India, was on Wednesday (5) confirmed by the U.S. Senate as the country’s envoy which would be his first Ambassador­ial posting. He is currently working as Deputy Assistant Secretary of State in the South and Central Asian Affairs Bureau of the State Department. He joined the Foreign Service in 1994.

The newly appointed Ambassador to SL was the deputy political counsellor at the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi from 2005 to 2008

Mr. Keshap and Mr. Verma, the U.S. envoy to India, both trace their origin to Punjab.

The newly appointed Ambassador to SL was the deputy political counsellor at the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi from 2005 to 2008.

Mr. Keshap also served as special assistant for the Middle East, North Africa, and South Asia for the under secretary of state for political affairs.

In 2003, he moved to the White House as director for North African and Middle Eastern regional affairs on the staff of the National Security Council. He was also the director for UN Human Rights in the Bureau of Internatio­nal Organizati­on Affairs from 2008 to 2010.

His father, Keshap Chander Sen, who was from Punjab, was a U.N. developmen­t economist working in Nigeria where Mr. Keshap was born in June, 1971. His mother, Zoe Calvert, had been in the U.S. Foreign Service when she met and married Mr. Sen in London. She had also served at the U.S. embassy in India.

“My parents’ service and my upbringing instilled in me a firm dedication and commitment to American values, and led me to a career in the Foreign Service,” Mr. Keshap said in his confirmati­on hearing on June 23.

He had said since January, Sri Lanka has made progress on challengin­g issues, from fighting corruption and media censorship, to beginning the long process of healing after decades of war. “We want to help the Sri Lankan people to strengthen democracy, civil society and human rights, including media freedom and freedom of religion,” he said.

“We want to help build a lasting peace and fellowship among Sri Lanka’s ethnic and religious communitie­s, including credible justice, accountabi­lity and reconcilia­tion that can facilitate closure for those who suffered and lost loved ones during the war,” Mr. Keshap added.

Speaking of the Maldives, he said that it faced challenges such as youth unemployme­nt, rising extremism, and social unrest. “We want a better relationsh­ip with the Maldives, so that we can deepen cooperatio­n with it. We also want to help it to return to the democratic path on which it courageous­ly embarked a few years ago, and look forward to strengthen­ing our relationsh­ip when that happens,” Mr. Keshap added.

(HINDU)

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