A group of 30 Sri Lankan high school students visited the Embassy of Sri Lanka last week. They met with the Embassy staff and posed questions about issues such as the recent victory over the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, internally displaced persons and Sri Lanka’s relations with the United States.
A group of 30 Sri Lankan high school students visited the Embassy of Sri Lanka last week. They met with the Embassy staff and posed questions about issues such as the recent victory over the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, internally displaced persons and Sri Lanka’s relations with the United States.
Ambassador Jaliya Wickramasuriya informed the student how the Embassy works and what his duties are in Washington. He also added that the Embassy staff has frequently met with members of Congress and Senior officials from the U.S. Government Departments and Institutions.
He emphasized that efforts to de-mine Northern villages, farm fields and to resettle displaced families were top priorities in the reconstruction and rehabilitation effort.
The Ambassador encouraged the students by stating that while visiting officials sites and organizations in Washington, D.C., they too were Ambassadors of Sri Lanka.
“As future leaders you are representatives of our country,” the Ambassador said. “What you say and do is a reflection on Sri Lanka.”
After their visit to the Embassy, the students toured the U.S. Department of State, Congress, the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.
The students visited Washington as part of the Presidential Classroom education series. The Presidential Classroom program, which began in 1968, sponsors trips to Washington, D.C. for talented high school students from the U.S. and abroad. So far, the program has provided trips for 120,000 students over four decades.
23, July, 2009
Embassy of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka
2148 Wyoming Avenue NW
Washington DC 20008
USA