Suu Kyi addresses Pussy Riot, Burmese Army in DC

By AFP
Published: 21 September 2012
Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi speaks after being presented with the Congressional Gold Medal in Washington
Aung San Suu Kyi delivers remarks after being presented with the Congressional Gold Medal at the U.S. Capitol in Washington on 19 September 2012. (Reuters)

Aung San Suu Kyi, on a landmark visit to the US, called Thursday for the release of jailed members of the Russian punk band Pussy Riot.

The opposition lawmaker, who spent 15 years under house arrest, said she “would like the whole group to be released as soon as possible,” during an event sponsored by the rights group Amnesty International.

“Was … anything in the song that was nasty to other people?” asked the Nobel Peace Prize winner, who was freed at the end of 2010.

A Moscow court last month sentenced three members of Pussy Riot to two years in a labor camp for hooliganism motivated by religious hatred over a performance against President Vladimir Putin in an Orthodox cathedral.

When told her comments could be seen as criticizing the Russian government, she said – to the laughter and applause of the crowd – that “governments must be prepared to take criticism.”

“It’s a different matter if you are insulting other people individually,” Suu Kyi told the audience, which included Pyotr Verzilov, husband of one of the imprisoned singers.

The band is scheduled to begin an appeal on October 1.

In other remarks at Washington’s Newseum, a museum dedicated to media and journalism, Suu Kyi said the years she spent confined to her home were “worth it.”

“I never thought I was making any sort of sacrifice. I never thought I was suffering,” she said. “I never forgot that I was much more fortunate than my colleagues who were in jail.”

Burma was ruled by an iron-fisted junta for decades but, since taking office last year, a reformist government under former general Thein Sein has freed political prisoners and allowed Suu Kyi’s party into electoral politics.

Suu Kyi said she has “always been very fond of the military,” adding that her father, who was assassinated in 1947, “founded the modern Burmese army.”

“My earliest memories of him were in uniform,” the opposition leader said.

She also condemned the use of violence, saying those who resort to it are “undermining the very foundations of human rights.”

Later in the day, Suu Kyi took part in a ceremony honoring five fellow Burmese citizens who suffered under the country’s military regime and were awarded the National Endowment for Democracy’s 2012 Democracy Award.

Those lauded included Min Ko Naing, a key leader of both the 1988 student movement and the 2007 “Saffron Revolution”; Khun Htun Oo, chairman of the Shan Nationalities League for Democracy; film director Kyaw Thu; doctor Cynthia Maung; and Aung Din, another leader of the 1988 student movement and co-founder of the US Campaign for Burma.

“To be honored is great but to honor is even greater,” Suu Kyi said. “I feel very happy that today I’m in the position to honor my fellow countrymen and women.”

Suu Kyi has been in Washington since Monday as part of a three-week trip across the US. The pro-democracy activist has received a rapturous welcome during the visit, her first since her release from house arrest.

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Comments


  1. tocharian says:

    What would Burmese people say if the Pussy Riot girls did the same performance that thye did in a Russian church at the Shwedagon pagoda. Suu Kyi should be careful about digging into issues related to “religious intolerance” and “internal affairs of other countries” (lol)
    By the way, what about Chinese dissidents in jail in China? Lots of them! Any thing about Chins seems to be taboo topic for Burmese. Too scared perhaps!

  2. Hkawn Shawng says:

    I am sick and tired of Aung San Suu Kyi’s hypocritical egocentric preaching when it comes to Human Rights and Democracy in Burma. Critical of Human Rights abuses abroad while silent on Human Rights violations at home shows her ethnocentric political stance. SILENCE IS VIOLENCE.Putting political status and greed above her moral obligation shows her true colour as a human being too. Why don’t you practice what you have been preaching over the past two decades? Now that you are a lawmaker how about you use your own liberty to promote others? Is that too much to ask?

  3. Ohn says:

    Very cosmopolitan and noble of Mother Suu to call for the release of poor little girls in the gulag.

    A few dozens women got raped in Arakan and Kachin even since these woment went to jail by the way. Oh, Mother Suu! Thank god you are here.

  4. Myu Tsaw says:

    We have yet to hear her call for the release of innocent citizens – over 70 persons are still in detention in Myitkyina, Kachin state alone, accused of association with unlawful organisation. Aung San Suu Kyi has yet to acknowledge that the renewed war by the very government she is part of has already displaced and uprooted over 90,000 Kachins.

  5. Katetawng says:

    Aun Su Kyi is now in the position of restoring the human dignity in Burma beginning from Kachin and Rohinja. The world is waiting to see how she live up to the position achieved.

  6. Htay Hla says:

    Daw Suu has very little to say other than lofty statements of democracy and rule of law. She does not practise democracy in her own party, let alone support the rights of our own ethnic minorities like the Kachins. She has now announced in Burma to the Burmese journals that she is ready to be our next leader. A pity- she is now showing her personal ambition, despite the fact she has no experience — she has not even grown up in Burma and her years of house arrest were a luxury compared to the 20 years of prison for the ’88 generation students. If she does lead the country in 2015 (since a lot of people don’t see her weaknesses)I don’t think she will be able to cope.

  7. Bhamothar says:

    Actually, we are seeing her now that she is doing nothing, but collecting accolades around the world. Not just the governments, but you (ASSK) must also be prepared to take criticism. Beautifying your words is not helping, rather hurting the people in Myanmar.

  8. Ko Pussy says:

    Wow! Riot Pussies’ comments above! :D

  9. Eagle Eyes says:

    Aung San Suu Kyi is not a national leader but only NLD party leader.
    Because she only care about her NLD party not ethnic people.
    See the Rohingyas, Rakhine and the Kachin cases.
    Her activities are only for her NLD party not for the people of Burma.





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