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Aung San Suu Kyi (Read 1681 times)
Sir Spot of Borg
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Aung San Suu Kyi
May 30th, 2012 at 8:34am
 
Well she has done well hey? Whodda thunkit.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/burmamyanmar/9297758/Aung-San-Suu...

Quote:
Aung San Suu Kyi yesterday ended 24 years of restriction on overseas travel, as she made the short journey from Burma to Thailand and began to build her presence on the global stage.

The veteran democracy campaigner said little as she was greeted at Bangkok airport by journalists and supporters chanting “Mother Suu, Mother Suu!”

She was then whisked to a waiting limousine amid heavy security, in a matter befitting her political celebrity.

During a five-day trip, she is due to meet Yingluck Shinawatra, the Thai prime minister, attend the World Economic Forum on East Asia and visit Burmese communities.

She will then return home before beginning a grand tour to Europe in mid-June, which will include the rare honour of addressing both houses of Parliament in Britain. In Dublin she will share a stage with Bono, the U2 singer and anti-poverty campaigner, and then visit Oslo to collect the Nobel peace prize she won 21 years ago.

The itinerary will be a severe test of her travel sickness, which aides said she succumbs to easily and required her to pack medicine for the 85-minute flight from Rangoon.

Following Ms Suu Kyi’s victory in landmark parliamentary by-elections last month, the trip to Thailand is being seen as a vote of confidence on her part in the seriousness of reforms introduced by the new government, even though it is dominated by former military figures.

“She would not take the risk of the leaving if she wasn’t absolutely certain she would be allowed to return,” said Suzanne DiMaggio, a vice president of the Asia Society.

Ms Suu Kyi, 66, last travelled overseas in 1988, shortly before protests erupted which propelled her to the front of the opposition movement to military rule. In 1989, she was put under house arrest, where she spent most of the subsequent two decades.

During intermittent periods of freedom, she declined opportunities to go abroad in the certainty that she would not be permitted to re-enter Burma.

In 1999, she stayed at home even as her husband, the academic Michael Aris, was dying of cancer in Britain. The junta had refused him a visa to visit Burma since 1995.


...

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Re: Aung San Suu Kyi
Reply #1 - Jun 1st, 2012 at 6:56pm
 
She is an inspiration around the world and a true selfless leader.
Its a shame the best this country can do is a pair of lying ego maniacs that would seek to trash this country on their fight for power.
Abbott and Gillard could learn a few valuable lessons about true leadership from Aung San Suu Kyi.
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Re: Aung San Suu Kyi
Reply #2 - Jun 2nd, 2012 at 7:32am
 
Its taken her a long time to do it too but obviously the ppl there appreciate her work.

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Re: Aung San Suu Kyi
Reply #3 - Jun 17th, 2012 at 6:55am
 
She apparently belatedly accepted her nobel peace prize. Last night on channel 24 there was a really good trumpet player playing for her.

http://abcnews.go.com/International/aung-san-suu-kyis-nobel-peace-prize-21/story...

Quote:
Burmese opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi formally accepted her Nobel Peace Prize today, more than two decades after it was awarded to honor her fight for democracy.

"We have been waiting for you for a very long time," Nobel Committee Chairman Thorbjorn Jagland told Suu Kyi. "In your isolation, you have become a moral leader for the whole world."

Suu Kyi won the award in 1991 but for more than 20 years was either forbidden from leaving her country, or too afraid she would never be allowed to return. Today, as a free woman and member of parliament in a newly open Burma (now called Myanmar), she finally gave her acceptance speech.

"When the Nobel Committee chose to honor me, the road I had chosen...became a less lonely path to follow," Suu Kyi said. "The Nobel Peace Prize opened up a door in my heart."

It was a remarkable moment.

A woman who had lived a difficult and lonely life as a prisoner of conscience was met by trumpet fanfare and an adoring crowd of dignitaries in Oslo's Town Hall, who gave her a pair of long standing ovations.

A Burmese musician played her favorite piece, the same one played here 22 years ago, when an empty chair marked Suu Kyi's absence.
Activist Awarded for Pushing Democracy Watch Video
Who Is Aung San Suu Kyi? Watch Video
San Suu Kyi's House Arrest Lengthened Watch Video

Today, she spoke of her years under house arrest, when "it felt as though I were no longer part of the real world." What the Nobel award had done, she said, was send an unmistakeable message, to her supporters and to the Burmese regime. "The Nobel Prize had drawn the attention of the world," she said. "We were not going to be forgotten."

The ceremony capped a stunning turnaround.

Twenty three years ago I met Suu Kyi in her villa in Rangoon. At the time she was playing a cat-and-mouse game with the generals who ruled Burma - leading large rallies against the regime when gatherings of more than three were illegal.

There the crowds had been adoring, too, but it was a dangerous time. Soldiers had shot and killed hundreds of student demonstrators the previous year, and while Suu Kyi said she could not "remain indifferent to what was going on" she also preached a peaceful opposition, sprinkling her speeches with references to Ghandi and Martin Luther King. "I certainly don't want any more people to be shot," she told me. "But this does not mean we are going to sit back weakly, and do nothing."

Twelve days after she spoke those words, Suu Kyi found her home cordoned off by soldiers. She was placed under house arrest, the beginning of a two-decade-long repression.

Time and again the regime made conditional offers - in particular the prospect of exile to Great Britain, where Suu Kyi might join her family.

The catch was always that she could not expect a safe return. When her husband, an Oxford scholar, was diagnosed with cancer in 1999, the government refused to grant him a visa that might have let him see his wife. He died later that year.

Suu Kyi always preferred house arrest to any deal that would bar her from returning, or compromise her campaign against the junta. So she stayed and suffered, and galvanized an international effort that imposed sanctions against the Burmese government and ultimately led to this year's moves toward democracy.


That page 1. You want page 2 click on the link.

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Re: Aung San Suu Kyi
Reply #4 - Jun 17th, 2012 at 7:31am
 
She is amazing and the people of Burma are so lucky to have her.

It's a shame that the Nobel Peace Prize has lost its relevance since Barack Obama got one. Luckily Aung San Suu Kyi was awarded hers long before that when the award held its true meaning. She is a worthy recipient.   

Go Burma! the next big tourist destination of Asia. Get it quick before the drunken Aussie bogans ruin it though.
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"When the power of love overcomes the love of power, the world will know peace." Hendrix
andrei said: Great isn't it? Seeing boatloads of what is nothing more than human garbage turn up.....
 
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Re: Aung San Suu Kyi
Reply #5 - Jun 17th, 2012 at 11:11am
 
Pretty obviously a puppet if she won a nobel peace prize
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