Burma’s democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi celebrated her 66th birthday on Sunday, her first as a free woman for almost a decade.
She was released from seven years of house arrest in November, having spent much of the past two decades as a prisoner in her own home, with the military regime never accepting her landslide election win in 1990.
In previous years, Suu Kyi’s supporters across the globe used her anniversary to reiterate calls for her release.
For her first free birthday in nine years the Nobel Peace Laureate went to Rangoon airport to meet the younger of her two sons, British national Kim Aris, who travelled to be with his mother for the occasion.
“I’m very glad,” she told reporters after being greeted by Aris with a kiss. She also thanked onlookers who wished her a happy birthday.
Aris, 33, was reunited with his mother on a visit to Rangoon in November soon after her release, after a decade of separation.
They were due to hold a family gathering at her lakeside home before giving alms to Buddhist monks and then celebrating at the headquarters of her National League for Democracy (NLD) party.
Party members said they would release doves, sparrows and balloons as in previous years — except that this time, their leader would be able to join them in the marking the occasion.
The first polls since 1990 were held on 7 November 2010, a few days before her release, but they were boycotted by the NLD, which said the rules were unfair.
Suu Kyi was excluded from the vote, won by the army’s political proxies amid allegations of cheating and intimidation.
Her release and a new nominally-civilian government have sparked cautious hopes of gradual reform and debate over whether to soften Western economic sanctions against Burma.
Suu Kyi herself has said sanctions should remain in place until there is real democratic reform and the European Union, when it opted to maintain them in April, expressed hopes of “a greater civilian character of the government.”
But the EU did lift for a year a visa ban and asset freeze on certain government members, including the foreign minister.
A high-level EU team is heading to Burma for exploratory talks with the new government, possibly arriving this weekend, a senior EU diplomat said on Friday. The NLD said Suu Kyi was due to meet them on Tuesday or Wednesday.
Tags: aung san suu kyi, burma, kim aris, myanmar, rangoon
MPs returned to Parliament in Burma’s capital Naypyidaw
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Urgent!Urgent!
Please tell A May Su to take care .
Tuesday born people are at risk to their life at the age 66,As Tuesday born people leaves the House of Rahu at this age and there is an old saying that the great lions(means Tuesday born)can’t leap over two 6′s.Be very careful during these coming 6 months.And over that time everything will become golden shinny for A May Su,So ,please tell her about this.
Thanks.
Happy Birthday Daw Aung San Suu Kyi!
Very happy to hear and see you and your son reunite again. Hope that all the families in Burma could reunite very soon and wish the wars to end so soon.
Happy Birthday Aunty Su and wish you to all the best of your life and your people. very glad to see this picture that reunite with your son.
Happy Birthday Aunty Su! Wishing you happy, healthy and successful year….