Buema-Aung San Suu Kyi
Country: Burma/Myanmar
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Aung San Suu Kyi

Aung San Suu Kyi, also called Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, (born June 19, 1945, Rangoon, Burma [now Yangon, Myanmar]), politician and opposition leader of Myanmar, daughter of Aung San (a martyred national hero of independent Burma) and Khin Kyi (a prominent Burmese diplomat), and winner of the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1991. She held multiple governmental posts from 2016, including that of state counselor, which essentially made her the de facto leader of the country. She was sidelined in February 2021 when the military seized power.

Early life

Aung San Suu Kyi was two years old when her father, then the de facto prime minister of what would shortly become independent Burma, was assassinated. She attended schools in Burma until 1960, when her mother was appointed ambassador to India. After further study in India, she attended the University of Oxford, where she met her future husband, the British scholar Michael Aris. She and Aris had two children and lived a rather quiet life until 1988, when she returned to Burma to nurse her dying mother, leaving her husband and sons behind. There the mass slaughter of protesters against the brutal and unresponsive rule of military strongman U Ne Win led her to speak out against him and to begin a nonviolent struggle for democracy and human rights in that country.

Activism and house arrest

In July 1989 the military government of the newly named Union of Myanmar (since 2011, Republic of the Union of Myanmar) placed Suu Kyi under house arrest in Yangon (Rangoon) and held her incommunicado. The military offered to free her if she agreed to leave Myanmar, but she refused to do so until the country was returned to civilian government and political prisoners were freed. The National League for Democracy (NLD), which Suu Kyi had cofounded in 1988, won more than 80 percent of the parliamentary seats that were contested in 1990, but the results of that election were ignored by the military government (in 2010 the military government formally annulled the results of the 1990 election). The news that Suu Kyi was being given the Nobel Prize set off intense vilification of her by the government, and, since she was still being detained, her son, Alexander Aris, accepted the award in her place. Suu Kyi was freed from house arrest in July 1995, although restrictions were placed on her ability to travel outside Yangon. The following year she attended the NLD party congress, but the military government continued to harass both her and her party. In 1998 she announced the formation of a representative committee that she declared was the country’s legitimate ruling parliament. Michael Aris died in London in early 1999. Prior to his death, the military junta denied him a visa to visit Suu Kyi in Myanmar, and Suu Kyi, anticipating that she would not be allowed to reenter the country if she left, remained in Myanmar.

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PC CREDIT: Aung San Suu Kyi in Yangon, Myanmar in 2010 © Drn/Getty Images

Aung San Suu Kyi

Aung San Suu Kyi, 1996. Richard Vogel—AP/Shutterstock.com Get a Britannica Premium subscription and gain access to exclusive content.Subscribe Now The junta once again placed Suu Kyi under house arrest from September 2000 to May 2002, ostensibly for having violated restrictions by attempting to travel outside Yangon. Following clashes between the NLD and pro-government demonstrators in 2003, the government returned her to house arrest. Calls for her release continued throughout the international community in the face of her sentence’s annual renewal, and in 2009 a United Nations body declared her detention illegal under Myanmar’s own law. In 2008 the conditions of her house arrest were somewhat loosened, allowing her to receive some magazines as well as letters from her children, who were both living abroad. In May 2009, shortly before her most recent sentence was to be completed, Suu Kyi was arrested and charged with having breached the terms of her house arrest after an intruder (a U.S. citizen) entered her house compound and spent two nights there. In August she was convicted and sentenced to three years in prison, though the sentence immediately was reduced to 18 months, and she was allowed to serve it while remaining under house arrest. At the time of her conviction, the belief was widespread both within and outside Myanmar that this latest ruling was designed to prevent Suu Kyi from participating in multiparty parliamentary elections (the first since 1990) scheduled for 2010. That suspicion became reality through a series of new election laws enacted in March 2010: one prohibited individuals from any participation in elections if they had been convicted of a crime (as she had been in 2009), and another disqualified anyone who was (or had been) married to a foreign national from running for office. In support of Suu Kyi, the NLD refused to reregister under those new laws (as was required) and was disbanded. The government parties faced little opposition in the November 7, 2010, election and easily won an overwhelming majority of legislative seats amid widespread allegations of voter fraud. Suu Kyi was released from house arrest six days after the election and vowed to continue her opposition to military rule.

Greater freedom

Government restrictions on Suu Kyi’s activities were further relaxed during 2011. She was allowed to meet freely with associates and others in Yangon and by midyear was able to travel outside the city. In August she met in the capital, Nay Pyi Taw (Naypyidaw), with Thein Sein, who had become the civilian president of Myanmar in March. Other high-profile meetings followed later in the year, including those with Thailand’s new prime minister, Yingluck Shinawatra, in October and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in December. Meanwhile, rules on political participation were eased, and, in advance of parliamentary by-elections scheduled for April 2012, the NLD was officially reinstated. In January 2012 Suu Kyi announced that she was seeking election to a constituency in Yangon, and her bid to run for office was approved by the government in February. She easily won her seat in the April 1 elections and was sworn into office on May 2.

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PC CREDIT: Burma's Commander in Chief Min Aung Hlaing and National League for Democracy (NLD) party leader Aung San Suu Kyi in Naypyidaw, Burma, on Dec. 2, 2015 Phyo Hein Kyaw—Reuters

Myanmar: 2012 election campaign

Supporters of pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi shouting slogans atop a truck during an election campaign, Myanmar, March 31, 2012. Altaf Qadri/AP In late May and early June 2012 Suu Kyi visited Thailand, her first trip outside Myanmar since 1988. Later in June she traveled to Europe, making stopovers in several countries. Highlights of that journey included giving the acceptance speech for her Nobel Prize in Oslo, Norway, and being invited to address the British Parliament in London.

Aung San Suu Kyi

Aung San Suu Kyi and her staff with U.S. Pres. Barack Obama and U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, Yangon, Myanmar, November 19, 2012. Pete Souza—Official White House Photo Suu Kyi maintained a high international profile—including a visit to China in mid-2015—as she worked toward greater political liberalization in Myanmar. Although some progress was achieved, no changes were made to the constitutional provision banning a candidate from running for the presidency whose spouse or children are foreign nationals. Nonetheless, Suu Kyi and the NLD campaigned vigorously for what turned out to be the country’s first openly contested parliamentary election. The polling, held in early November 2015, produced a major victory for the NLD, which was able to secure large-enough majorities of seats in both legislative chambers to allow the party to form the next national government. As Suu Kyi was not able to stand for the presidency, the NLD selected her close confidant, Htin Kyaw, as the party’s candidate, though Suu Kyi clearly indicated her intent to rule the country by proxy. On March 15, 2016, legislative members elected Htin Kyaw to serve as the country’s new president He was inaugurated on March 30.

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PC CREDIT: Aung San Suu Kyi Drn—Getty Images/Thinkstock

State counselor of Aung San Suu Kyi

Suu Kyi initially held four ministerial posts in the new government—minister of energy, minister of education, foreign minister, and minister in the president’s office—but within a week had given up the first two positions. She was then named state counselor, a position newly created by the legislature and signed into law by Htin Kyaw; the post was similar to that of prime minister and potentially more powerful than the president. The creation of the state counselor role for Suu Kyi rankled the military, whose legislative members denounced the bill that provided for the new position as being unconstitutional and refused to take part in the vote on the bill. In her new role, Suu Kyi focused on finding peace with the country’s many ethnic armed organizations, of which 20 or so were engaged in active insurgencies. In contrast with some success experienced on that front, she and her administration faced widespread international condemnation over the treatment of the Muslim Rohingya people of Myanmar’s Rakhine state. After some attacks by Rohingya militants on security installations in 2016 and 2017, the military and police embarked on a brutal campaign against the entire group, allegedly committing human rights abuses and causing a large percentage of the population to flee the country. Given Suu Kyi’s history as a champion of human rights and democracy, sharp criticism was directed at her in particular for initially seeming to ignore the crisis and, when she did address it, not denouncing the actions of the security forces or intervening. In protest of her inaction regarding the plight of the Rohingya, several organizations revoked human rights-related honours and awards previously bestowed upon her. The nascent administration was hit with a bit of upheaval in March 2018 when Htin Kyaw resigned unexpectedly. His successor, NLD stalwart Win Myint, was also a longtime associate of Suu Kyi, and it was expected that the established division of power between the presidency and Suu Kyi’s state counselor position would continue unchanged.

Removal from power

Although Suu Kyi’s reputation had suffered abroad, at home she and the NLD still retained a good amount of support. In the November 8, 2020, parliamentary elections, the NLD won a commanding majority of seats in both legislative chambers and was poised to form the next government. Its victory was clouded, though, as the polls had been canceled in some sections of the country because of insecurity, which disenfranchised ethnic minority voters in those areas. The military and its aligned party, the Union Solidarity and Development Party (USDP), decried the results as being fraudulent and appealed to the electoral commission, which dismissed their claims. The newly elected parliament was due to hold its first session on February 1, 2021, but, in the early hours of that day, the military seized power. Suu Kyi and other NLD leaders were detained by the military, which allowed Vice Pres. Myint Swe (a former general) to become acting president. Claiming that the unresolved election complaints were a threat to the country’s sovereignty, he invoked clauses 417 and 418 of the constitution, which provided for the military to declare a one-year state of emergency and take over administration of the government. Two days later the police announced that they had filed charges against Suu Kyi with regards to the presence of illegally imported walkie-talkie radios in her home. During her trial, which began in a secretive manner on February 16, it was revealed that she had also been charged with having violated the country’s natural disaster management law by interacting with a crowd during the COVID-19 pandemic. Meanwhile, work strikes and other acts of civil disobedience ensued in the weeks following the coup, as did large-scale protests calling for her release. Although Ms Suu Kyi did not address the issue of women in her victory speech, she has undoubtedly served as a role-model to millions of girls in Myanmar and even all over the world for her determination and continuous efforts in fighting for her beliefs. This year in June during the World Economic Forum on East Asia, Ms Suu Kyi gave a speech by mentioning some ways to tackle the cultural problem of women`s empowerment in ASEAN regions, such as to encourage women to assume leadership roles in political parties and to provide incentives to families that keep their girls in school. It is hoped that her success will be the beginning of the age of reform, which would hopefully create a favorable environment for promoting greater gender equality – a goal that Wedu strives to accomplish in Myanmar, a country that we believe has enormous potential and thus want to focus on more and more.

Major Works

She is the leading politician of Burma and world’s prominent political prisoner who has upheld the right for democracy and worked relentlessly for the freedom of Burmese people against military rule and human rights. For the same, she has been bestowed with the prestigious Nobel Peace Prize and Congressional Gold Medal, the highest civilian award in US in 1991 and 2012 respectively. She is the founding member and chairperson of the National League for Democracy (NLD) in Burma.

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Awards & Achievements

She was awarded Nobel Peace Prize 1991 "for her non-violent struggle for democracy and human rights". Suu Kyi has been granted various titles in her life. Some of them include Doctor Honoris Causa by Vrije Universiteit Brussel and the Université catholique de Louvain, Honorary Doctorate in Civil Law by St Hughs College Oxford her alma mater and Honorary Fellow by School of Oriental and African Studies. She was the honorary member of The Elders, a group of eminent global leaders brought together by Nelson Mandela. However, she stepped down from her post upon her election to parliament. She was Club of Madrid Honorary Member in 2008. She has been an honorary board member of International IDEA and ARTICLE 19 since her detention. Suu Kyi received Francois Zimeray, France's Ambassador for Human Rights in 2011.

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