Aung San Suu Kyi says Burmese hungry for justice
Jun 13th, 2011
June 13, 2011 09:41 AM EST | AP
GENEVA — Burmese pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi said Monday her nation hungers for justice and progress and the international community must help lift its workers’ grim conditions.
“Burma must not be allowed to fail and the world must not be allowed to fail Burma,” the 65-year-old Nobel laureate told a U.N. labor conference by videolink, referring to Myanmar.
Myanmar’s pro-democracy icon, freed last November after spending much of the past 20 years under house arrest, said her nation once seemed the most likely success story in Southeast Asia but “has fallen behind almost all the other nations in the region.”
Suu Kyi won the 1991 Nobel Peace prize for her nonviolent struggle for democracy and led her National League for Democracy to victory in 1990 elections, but the military junta that led the government refused to recognize the results.
The former junta changed the nation’s name to Myanmar, but many democracy supporters and Suu Kyi still call it Burma.
After elections in November that were swept by a party close to the ruling junta, military leaders turned over control to a nominally civilian government in March. And in recent months Suu Kyi has been turning to videolinks and other means to get her message out, fearing as she has for years that if she were to leave the country she might not get back in.
Suu Kyi, seeking to revive her party, said its members and other groups and people struggling for political change created a “people’s network” six months ago to focus on social and humanitarian projects that spread democracy and human rights.
“The growth, rapid beyond our expectations, of this network is evidence of the indivisibility of social, economic and political concerns, and of the hunger of our people for a society secured by acceptable norms of social justice joined to political and economic progress,” she said.