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Aung San Suu Kyi
(redirected from Daw Aung San Suu Kyi)

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Aung San Suu Kyi (1945– )

Myanmar (Burmese) politician and human-rights campaigner, leader of the National League for Democracy (NLD), the main opposition to the military junta. She is the daughter of former Burmese premier Aung San, who fought for the country's independence. Despite Suu Kyi being placed under house arrest in 1989, the NLD won the 1990 elections, although the junta refused to surrender power. She was awarded the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1991 in recognition of her ‘nonviolent struggle for democracy and human rights’ in Myanmar. She was released from house arrest in 1995, but the junta banned her from resuming any leadership post within the NLD and she has been under house arrest for much of the period since 2000.

Throughout the 1990s her situation grabbed international attention as she was not allowed to move freely around Myanmar. In 1998, her husband, Oxford academic Michael Aris, whom she met when studying in England, was refused a visa to enter Myanmar, despite suffering from cancer, from which he died in March 1999.

In August 2000, she was involved in a nine-day roadside protest after not being allowed to travel to meet NLD members, and was placed under house arrest for two weeks and for a further 20 months 2000–02 and again from 2003. This prompted renewed international condemnation of the military government.

She was born in Yangon (Rangoon). Her father was assassinated when she was two years old. Her mother, Khin Kyi, was Burma's ambassador in India in the 1960s, and Suu Kyi was educated at schools and universities in Myanmar, India, Britain, and the USA. She graduated in 1967 from Oxford University with a BA in philosophy, politics, and economics and worked for the United Nations from the 1970s.

She returned to Myanmar in 1988 to take care of her ailing mother. This coincided with a growing movement for democratization, which followed the retirement of the dictator General Ne Win. Influenced strongly by Mahatma Gandhi's philosophy of non-violence, Suu Kyi pressed for reform and helped found the NLD. The country's military junta placed her under house arrest in 1989 and she refused to leave Myanmar because she was told she would be refused re-entry. In 1990 the NLD won parliamentary elections, but the military did not allow it to take power and kept Suu Kyi under house arrest until 1995.

Aung San Suu Kyi

Burmese (Myanmar) politician; see Suu Kyi.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
San San, 73, left Burma for the Thailand-Burma border shortly after the Depayin massacre last May 30, 2003, where some 70 people were reportedly killed when military authorities arrested democracy leader Daw Aung San Suu Kyi.
Claiming that Aung San's daughter Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, the general secretary of the NLD, now embodies that legacy, he further implies that only this form of what he describes as a rather gentle humanistic nationalism represents the genuine democratic impulse of the people.
Born in 1945, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi is the Western-educated daughter of assassinated national independence leader General Aung San.
 
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