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  • Geetika Srivastava to head Indian mission in Pakistan, first woman after 22 male representatives

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    Geetika Srivastava to head Indian mission in Pakistan, first woman after 22 male representatives
    Women from India had previously worked as diplomats in Pakistan, but rarely in positions of leadership like this...

    Digital Desk: Geetika Srivastava will be India's next charge d'affaires at its High Commission in Islamabad being the first woman to hold the position.

    She will succeed Dr. M. Suresh Kumar, who is currently serving as joint secretary at the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) and is set to go back to New Delhi.

    A charge d'affaires is a diplomat who temporarily leads a diplomatic mission in a foreign country in the absence of the Ambassador or High Commissioner, though the position has several responsibilities.

    High Commissions are the term used for diplomatic missions between Commonwealth nations, while Embassies are used for missions between non-Commonwealth nations.

    Since August 2019, the Indian and Pakistani missions in Islamabad and New Delhi have operated without high commissioners; instead, they are each other's charge d'affaires.

    Before Pakistan lowered the status of the High Commission as a result of the repeal of Article 370, Ajay Bisaria served as the final Indian High Commissioner in Islamabad.

    There have been 22 heads of the mission since 1947 when the late Sri Prakasa assumed leadership as India's High Commissioner in Pakistan.  Srivastava, an Indian Foreign Service (IFS) officer since 2005, will hold the position as the first woman.

    From 2007 to 2009, she served at the Indian High Commission in China. She also held postings at the Regional Passport Office in Kolkata and the External Affairs Ministry's Directorate for the Indian Ocean Region.

    Women from India had previously worked as diplomats in Pakistan, but rarely in positions of leadership like this. Along with the difficulties of international diplomacy, particularly between two nations that have been at odds since 1947, the position of High Commissioner in Pakistan also presents its own peculiar set of difficulties.

    A few years ago, Islamabad was designated as a "non-family" posting for Indian diplomats. This restriction prevents female officers in limiting for taking up the role. 
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