Atul Keshap sworn in as US envoy to Sri Lanka
Indian-American Atul Keshap has been sworn in as the US ambassador to
Sri Lanka and Maldives.
"American people want to partner with the people of Sri Lanka as they
forge a diverse, prosperous, unified, reconciled and democratic nation,"
Keshap told Washington-based media.
"In the Maldives, we want to be partners with the people and
government in expanding rule of law and human rights, and combating
violent extremism and the effects of climate change," he said.
Keshap was confirmed by the US Senate as the country's envoy last
week. This is his first ambassadorial posting.
He has served as the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State in South and
Central Asian Affairs.
"For me to serve as the Ambassador of the United States of America to
Sri Lanka and Maldives gives me great personal joy and a renewed and
tremendous sense of dedication and solemn commitment to the values that
make our country a beacon of Liberty, a lamp lit beside the golden door.
I very much look forward to working with the people of these beautiful
and wondrous lands," he said.
"He is an individual of a deep strategic insight, a fearless tenacity
and unrelenting royalty," assistant secretary of state for South and
Central Asia Nisha Desai Biswal said.
"Atul believes in transformational power of engaging directly with a
wide range of actors from government officials to civil society, even to
Bollywood actor," Higginbottom said.
The top American diplomat praised the role played by Keshap in
creating consensus on India-US civil nuclear deal while being posted at
the US Embassy in New Delhi.
Keshap and Verma, the US envoy to India, both trace their origin to
Punjab.
His father, Keshap Chander Sen, who was from Punjab, was a UN
development economist working in Nigeria where Keshap was born in June,
1971. His mother, Zoe Calvert, had been in the US Foreign Service when
she met and married Sen in London. She had also served at the US embassy
in India. "If I have achieved anything in life, it is because of the
wisdom my parents imparted and the sacrifices they undertook. I am
forever in their debt," he said.
Sri Lankan ambassador to the US, Prasad Kariyawasam and Maldives
deputy UN permanent representative Jeff Waheed were present at the
swearing-in ceremony, attended by a number of Indian-Americans. |