Dicki Chhoyan | |
---|---|
Foreign Minister of the Central Tibetan Administration | |
In office 2011 – 28 February 2016 | |
Prime Minister | Lobsang Sangay |
Succeeded by | Lobsang Sangay |
Personal details | |
Born | Dickyi Choeyang 1966 Mussoorie, India |
Citizenship | Canada |
Alma mater | Indiana University, University of Guelph |
Occupation | Politician |
Dicki Chhoyang or Dickyi Choeyang (Tibetan: བདེ་སྐྱིད་ཆོས་དབྱིངས་, Wylie: bde-skyid chos-dbyings, Lhasa dialect: [tìcîː t͡ɕʰýjiŋ]), (Mussoorie, India, 1966 -) is a Tibetan politician who was the former Foreign Minister of the Central Tibetan Administration.[1]
Dicki Chhoyang was born in Mussoorie, India, in 1966. She immigrated to Canada with her family at 4 years of age. She grew up in Montreal, Quebec in Canada and began working for the Tibetan community at a very young age. Around the age of 20 years, she worked in two key projects. On the one hand, she participated in the first Canadian documentary on Tibet called A Song for Tibet made by the National Film Board of Canada, and secondly to the US-Tibetan resettlement project in the United States. She was a local coordinator and helped 21 Tibetans relocate in Connecticut. At the age of 27, she studied and worked 10 years in Tibet and China.[2] In December 1999, at Indiana University, MA, she got a degree in Central Eurasian studies.[3] In 2006, she also obtained a M.Sc. from the University of Guelph.[4]
Candidate for election in 2011, she was elected the Electorate of North America becoming Deputy of the 15th Assembly Tibetan Parliament in exile. In September 2011, she was replaced by Tashi Namgyal Khamsitsang when she was appointed Minister of Foreign Affairs of the 14th Tibetan Kashag.[5] she resigned from her post on 28 February 2016.[citation needed]
In February 2020, she was appointed as the Interim Director for McGill University's Indigenous Initiatives.[6]