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DBpedia 2015-10

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Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { ?s ?p "Naela Chohan (Urdu: نائلہ چوہان, alternative spelling Naila Chohan) (born 6 May 1958 in Rawalpindi, Pakistan) is a Pakistani diplomat and Women's Rights advocate and artist. She is an alumnus of Quaid-e-Azam University and the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. As a seasoned and veteran diplomat, Naela Chohan has assumed a leadership position in eight different Pakistani diplomatic missions on five different continents. Naela Chohan is the current High Commissioner of Pakistan to Australia, where she has laid emphasis on bolstering bilateral ties, therein prioritizing the enhancement of trade, business, educational and economic relations. She has previously served as Pakistan's Secretary for the Middle East and Africa, prior to which she was the Ambassador of Pakistan to Argentina, Uruguay, Peru and Ecuador, where she has been a vocal proponent of stronger ties between Pakistan and Latin America.Along with only a handful of other diplomats, Naela Chohan represents the first and senior-most cohort of women to rise to the highest echelon of Pakistan's Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Canada's weekly foreign policy Embassy Magazine in January, 2008 described her by saying that "though slight in stature and soft in speech, Naela Chohan accounts for 50 per cent of the Pakistani foreign service's most potent power couple." She is responsible for several Pakistani landmarks including the Plaza de Pakistan in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Naela Chohan is a hyperpolyglot with demonstrable fluency in seven languages including Persian, French, and Spanish. Naela Chohan was the first female foreign diplomat to serve in Iran following the 1979 Revolution. Beyond her diplomatic career, Ambassador Naela Chohan is a strong advocate of Women's Rights through the medium of visual arts, and exhibitions of her art have taken place on four continents. Her most notable work is Souffrance, which has been kept on permanent display at the UNESCO headquarters in Paris since 2002."@en }

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