Aung San Suu Kyi

It has been 22 years since she was thrown into the midst of the country’s biggest political upheaval. To this day, she remains the legitimate elected leader of the Burmese people, but due to her political vision and popularity among the Burmese public, she has spent over 14 of the last 20 years under house arrest.
Born on June 19th 1945 in Burma, she is the daughter of the country’s independence hero, General Aung San. She was only two years old at the time of her father’s assassination. As her mother was the urmese ambassador to India and Nepal, Suu Kyi was always on the move, and she received her education in Burma, India, and the United Kingdom.
“A strong sense of duty toward my people and my country, I was always aware of that”

On August 26th 1988 at the famous Shwedagon Pagoda in central Yangon, during her first and best-known speech, she told the cheering crowd of half a million people: “The present crisis is the concern of the entire nation. I could not, as my father’s daughter, remain indifferent to all that was going on. This national crisis could, in fact, be called the second struggle for independence.” With that speech, she won the hearts and minds of the Burmese people.
As her popularity soared, the military regime became nervous over the frailty of its own power and responded with utmost brutal force. The soldier shot at thousands of peaceful protesters, killing up to 5,000 civilians and injuring thousands of students, women, children and elders. Thousands more were arrested, tortured and given lengthy prison sentences. Many of them remain behind bars as political prisoners to this day. Aung San Suu Kyi, too, was immediately put under house arrest.
“Victory denied”

“My choice has already been made. It’s my country first”

When Michael Aris was dying from prostate cancer and asked to see his wife one last time, the military junta denied him the opportunity. Instead, they encouraged Suu Kyi to leave Burma to see her dying husband. Knowing that once she stepped out of the country, she would not be allowed to return, Aung San Suu Kyi decided to stay in Yangon. The military regime’s cruelty went as far as cutting off phone lines and all forms of communications between her and her husband. Michael Aris died on March 27th 1999, without ever seeing his wife again. The last time she saw her two children, Alexander and Kim, was back in 2000. Since then, she has been locked away at her lakeside residence, barred from communicating with the outside world and her family.
Although San Suu Kyi has chosen the path of hardship, loss, and sacrifice, she once said in an interview,”I don’t look upon it as a sacrifice. It’s a choice. If you choose to do something, then you shouldn’t say it’s a sacrifice because nobody forced you to do it.”
“Years of arrest”

In May 2003, her envoy was brutally attacked by government-backed thugs, in an incident referred to as Depayin Massacre (name derived from where the incident took place). Up to 100 of her supporters were believed to have been beaten to death by the regime’s cronies. Even the car in which Suu Kyi was riding came under attack, but she escaped the ambush unscathed and was immediately arrested by the junta. To illustrate the rule of law does not exist under the military regime, instead of arresting the thugs who attacked her envoy, the government arrested her supporters and witnesses at the scene. She has been under house arrest from May 2003 to this day.
A few weeks before her detention terms came to an end, in May 2009 a bizarre incident occurred involving an unknown American named John Yettaw who swam to her lakeside home and sought refuge there for a couple of days. The military regime accused her of breaching the terms of her house detention and brought her to court. Many people inside and outside of Burma speculated that it was a politically motivated attempt by the military government to extend her detention terms in order to prevent her from participating in the 2010 elections. The international community severely condemned the trumped-up charges and the circumstances of the court proceedings. The trial spanned over three months and in August 2009, a verdict was made, sentencing her to 18 more months under house arrest.
“International Recognition and Rewards”

Reference and Credit: US Campaign for Burma