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Daw Aung San
Suu Kyi is the daughter of
one of the
A watershed in her life was 1988, when Suu Kyi received a call from Burma that her mother had suffered
a stroke and did not have long to live. Suu Kyi returned to
The ruling
junta – "political party" would be too generous a concession – goes
by the Orwellian name of the State Law and Order Restoration Council (SLORC).
The news event that brought Suu
Kyi back into prominence in May 2002 was her release
from 19 months of house arrest in her barricaded villa in
There was
outrage around the world in 2000 when Suu Kyi tried to leave
Suu Kyi (pronounced Soo Chee) was two
years old when her father – the de facto prime minister of newly independent
She arrived
back in
Next came a general election in 1990, which political parties
were allowed to contest. Suu Kyi headed the National League for Democracy (NLD), which
won a landslide victory, with 80 per cent support. This was not be
tolerated by the SLORC leaders, who refused to recognize the election results.
Worse, SLORC put the elected
pro-democracy leaders under house arrest, including Suu Kyi.
Despite the
restrictions of house arrest, Suu Kyi
continued to campaign for democracy, and for this she
won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991.
One of Suu Kyi's most dramatic speeches
was in 1995, soon after she was released from nearly six years of house arrest,
when she spoke to a global women's conference in
In her speech, she said, "…to the best of my knowledge, no
war was ever started by women. But it is women and children who have always
suffered the most in situations of conflict." She mentioned "the war
toys of grown men." Without specifically targeting her SLORC opponents, but
her words dripping with gentle sarcasm, Suu Kyi went on to say:
"There is an outmoded Burmese proverb still
recited by men, who wish to deny that women too can play a part in bringing
necessary change and progress to their society: 'The dawn rises only when the
rooster crows.'
But Burmese people today are well aware of the
scientific reason behind the rising of dawn and the falling of dusk. And the
intelligent rooster surely realizes that it is because dawn comes that it crows
and not the other way around.
"It crows to welcome the light that has
come to relieve the darkness of night. It is not the prerogative of men alone
to bring light to the world: women with their capacity for compassion and
self-sacrifice, their courage and perseverance, have done much to dissipate the
darkness of intolerance and hate, suffering and despair."
It was a
powerful speech, subtly crafted for the targeted audience in her homeland.In 1999, Michael Aris,
was dying of prostate cancer in
supporters, including high-ranking
diplomats from
Suu Kyi chose instead a
traditional black lungi with a white jacket. She
cried only when one of the monks reminded the audience that the essence of
Buddhism is to treat suffering with equanimity.The
police did not stop the supporters from visiting Suu Kyi in her time of grief. But they took the names and
addresses of all those who attended at the service to honour the husband from
whom she had been separated since she left
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Born in |
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1969-1971 |
Assistant Secretary, Advisory
Committee on Administrative and Budgetary Questions, United Nations
Secretariat, |
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1972 |
Research Officer, Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, |
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The famous |
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Proposed the formation of a
People's Consultative Committee during the democratic uprising in |
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The
National League for Democracy (NLD) is formed, with Daw
Aung San Suu Kyi as general secretary. |
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Daw Aung
San Suu Kyi confronts an
army unit ordered to aim their rifles at her while campaigning in the Irrawaddy Delta. An army major finally intervenes,
countermands the order and prevents her assassination. |
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The military regime that seized
power from the people on September 18, 1988, placed her under house arrest in
Rangoon under martial law that allows for detention without charge or trial
for three years; went on hunger strike to protect the students taken from her
house to the Military Intelligence Interrogation Center; recognized as a
prisoner of conscience by Amnesty International |
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Despite her continuing detention,
the National League for Democracy won a landslide victory in the general
elections by securing 82 percent of the seats; the military junta refuses to
recognize the results of the election. |
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1991 |
Awarded,
in absentia, the 1990 Rafto Human Rights Prize. Nobel
Peace Prize |
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The defenders of human rights need our
support in Bill Clinton, EX President of |
In The
(By Daw Aung San Suu Kyi)
In
the
if there's someone who's listening
for secrets they can sell.
The informers are paid in the blood of the land
and no one dares speak what the tyrants won't stand.
In
the quiet
no one laughs and no one thinks out loud.
In the quiet
you can hear it in the silence of the crowd
In
the
when the soldiers are coming
to carry them away.
The Chinese want a road; the French want the oil;
the Thais take the timber; and SLORC takes the spoils...
In the
In the
what is silenced by murder
and covered up with fear.
But, despite what is forced, freedom's a sound
that liars can't fake and no shouting can drown.