After training at the
Foreign Service Institute in New Delhi, he was allotted Chinese as his foreign language. He served in the Consulate General of India,
Hong Kong (it was then called Commission of India, Hong Kong as it was still a UK territory) from 1993 to 1995, during which he obtained his advanced diploma from the
Chinese University of Hong Kong. Thereafter, he served as Second Secretary /First Secretary at the
Embassy of India, Beijing from 1995 to 1999. He subsequently served at the Permanent Mission of India to the UN Offices in Geneva from 1999 to 2002 looking after, among others, specialized agencies of the
United Nations. He served in the Indian Embassy in Hanoi from 2005 to 2009, and as Deputy Consul General at the Consulate General of India in San Francisco from 2009 to 2012. The Indian Consulate General in San Francisco then had a very large consular jurisdictional area, covering states up to Hawaii, Alaska and New Mexico.
High Commissioner to Namibia Kumar Tuhin was appointed as the High Commissioner of India to Namibia on 23 June 2015. He completed his assignment in October 2018. During his tenure in Namibia, Mr. Tuhin laid the foundations for the establishment of a Centre of Excellence in Information Technology (CEIT) at the
Namibia University of Science and Technology. During the visit of President of India to Namibia in 2016, Tuhin was the signatory from the Indian side of the MoU on cooperation between the Namibia Institute for Public Administration and Management, (NIPAM) and the
Indian Institute of Management Ahmedabad. In Sep 2018, Mr. Tuhin was the signatory from the Indian side of the agreement between the NIPAM and the
Lal Bahadur Shastri National Academy of Administration. India-Namibia economic relations received specific boost during his tenure.
Ambassador to Hungary Tuhin was appointed as the
Ambassador of India to Hungary on 26 September 2018. For his work in Hungary, Mr. Tuhin has indicated economic sectors as priority areas. During his stint in Hungary, political exchanges between India and Hungary strengthened with the visits of External Affairs Minister
Dr. S. Jaishankar to Hungary from 25 to 27 August 2019 (which was Minister Jaishankar's first visit to Hungary after assuming office), of Minister of Jal Shakti
Gajendra Singh Shekhawat to Hungary from 14 to 17 October 2019 and of Hungarian Foreign Minister
Péter Szijjártó to India from 14 to 17 January 2020. The parent Indian company of Kischemicals in
Sajóbábony decided in Nov 2020 to increase their investment by Euro 32 million. The 6th Indian Film Festival in Hungary was organized during Dec 2020-Jan 2021. The Indian Tourism Office participated in Utazas Travel Expo from February 27- March 1, 2020 and a number of Indian companies participated in Sirha Budapest 2020. In recognition of his contribution, the Department of Indian Studies of the
Eötvös Loránd University (ELTE University),
Budapest honoured Tuhin with "Amicus Facultatis" award on 10 May 2021. Tuhin completed his tenure in Hungary in Nov 2021 and returned to India to assume charge as the Director General of the Indian Council for Cultural Relations, an autonomous organization under the
Ministry of External Affairs of India.
Ambassador to Bosnia and Herzegovina On 14 May 2019, Kumar Tuhin was concurrently accredited as the Ambassador of India to
Bosnia and Herzegovina. He presented his credentials to Mr.
Želјko Komšić, Chairman of the Presidency of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
Operation Ganga in Hungary Immediately after the start of the
Russian invasion of Ukraine on 24 Feb 2022, the Govt of India launched
Operation Ganga to evacuate stranded Indian students in
Ukraine. Given Tuhin's previous experience in Hungary, he was deputed to lead the Operation Ganga in Hungary and he took charge in Budapest on 25 Feb 2022 itself. Over a span of two weeks, he successfully coordinated the complex task of evacuating more than 6000 Indian students from Ukraine through 32 special flights operating out of Budapest airport. Given the small border between Hungary and Ukraine, initially it was estimated that about 800-900 Indian students would cross through the Hungarian border, but because of border crossing difficulties at Ukraine-Romania and Ukraine -Poland borders, the number of students crossing through the Hungarian border surged manifold and almost one third of the total 22500 students were evacuated through Operation Ganga in Hungary. == Other details ==