Suu Kyi holds no grudges against jailers

June 27, 2012 07:33 am | Updated November 16, 2021 11:41 pm IST - PARIS

Myanmar Oppositio leader Aung San Suu Kyi and French President Francois Hollande meet at the Elysee Palace on Tuesday.

Myanmar Oppositio leader Aung San Suu Kyi and French President Francois Hollande meet at the Elysee Palace on Tuesday.

Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi said on Tuesday that she holds no grudges against the military regime that kept her under house arrest for some 15 years and considers them people to work with toward reform.

Ms. Suu Kyi met with the press after a meeting with President Francois Hollande on the first day of her four-day visit to France to close out a European tour that has taken her to Switzerland, Norway, Ireland and Britain.

The Nobel Peace Prize winner has been a world symbol of courage and hope for facing down Myanmar’s military regime, which ruled for 49 years until last year. She is now helping the country usher in what many hope is a transition to democracy. And pragmatism seems to be her watchword.

“I certainly do not bear any grudges against the military regime,” she said. “I never think of them as those people who placed me under house arrest for so many years. This is not the way we bring about national reconciliation.

“I think of them as people with whom I would like to work in order to bring reform to our country,” she added.

It was unclear whether he was making reference to the French oil giant Total which has been present in Myanmar for decades under military rule there, and became the object of criticism.

Ms. Suu Kyi said she wants “democracy-friendly, human rights-friendly” investments that protect the environment of her country, which she refers to by its colonial name, Burma. However, she added, “I do not want to be shackled by the past.”

She said that “we must go forward to the future,” and that Total had made compensations to people displaced by a gas pipeline. In response to a question, she said that investment in technology would be welcome from France and others.

“We would like to give everybody an opportunity to engage in business that actually strengthens the process of democratization,” she added.

Ms. Suu Kyi, who turned 67 this month during her trip, is putting the accent on youth during her visit to France and, during her news conference the word “future” constantly found its way into her remarks. Among her activities in France is a conference-debate on Thursday with some 1,400 students at the Sorbonne University. Education is vital so that the new generation can carry the ball, and anchor the hoped for democracy once people like herself retreat from the foreground.

Youth make up 32 per cent of Myanmar’s population and play an important role in Ms. Suu Kyi’s party, which was the big winner in partial parliamentary elections in April.

On Wednesday, Ms. Suy Kyi was meeting with Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius, and planting a “tree of liberty” in the ministry garden.

She has been collecting honours during her travels that were conferred on her many years ago while trapped at home, from her Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo to her honorary degree from Oxford which she once attended.

In Paris, she will pick up an award on Wednesday granted in 2004 making her an honorary citizen of the city of Paris.

On her European travels, Ms. Suu Kyi has been accorded the attention of a diva. Asked at the news conference if she sees herself as the icon she embodies for many in the world, she scoffed, calling it unsettling, even if she understands the human need to put a face on everything.

“I represent the human face of the movement for democracy in Burma and I think that is where it should remain,” she said. “I’m always very disturbed when people speak of me as an icon. Icons just seem to sit there doing nothing at all And I work very, very hard, I assure you.”

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