North Carolina honours Indian-American activist Swadesh Chatterjee

Chatterjee played a key role in former President Bill Clinton's March 2000 visit to India. He was also a part of the Indian-American delegation that accompanied Clinton during the visit.

New York: North Carolina Governor Ray Cooper presented the Order of the Long Leaf Pine to Indian-American activist and entrepreneur Swadesh Chatterjee.

Chatterjee, 72, who was awarded at a ceremony on Friday in Cary, is known for strengthening the US-India relationship over the past three decades.

Cooper applauded Chatterjee’s contribution to the development of North Carolina, and also in enriching the India-US relationship and cultural milieu of America.

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Chatterjee was the chairman and co-founder of the US-India Friendship Council, which played an instrumental role in the passage of the US-India Civilian Nuclear Deal.

Chatterjee played a key role in former President Bill Clinton’s March 2000 visit to India. He was also a part of the Indian-American delegation that accompanied Clinton during the visit.

He became the first Indian-American to be conferred with the Padma Bhushan in 2001. Chatterjee was also inducted as a member of Indian PM’s Global Advisory Council of Overseas Indians in January 2009.

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He was the first recipient of the Community Leader of the Year award by the ethnic newspaper, India Abroad in 2006.

Chatterjee has a B.Sc in Physics from Calcutta University, a B.E. in Instrumentation and Electronic Engineering from Jadavpur University, and an MBA from North Carolina State University.

He and his wife Manjusri Chatterjee, a practicing physician, live in Cary.

Indo-Asian News Service

Indo-Asian News Service or IANS is a private Indian news agency. It was founded in 1986 by Indian American publisher Gopal Raju as the "India Abroad News Service" and later… More »
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