Suu Kyi hits the campaign trail in Myanmar
8 Feb
Huge Crowds of supporters greeted Myanmar opposition leader
Aung San Suu Kyi with thunderous applause as she embarked on Tuesday on
her first campaign trip since becoming an official candidate for April
elections.
The Nobel Peace laureate traveled for the first time in two decades to the Irrawaddy delta, Myanmar’s rice bowl and the region most devastated by Cyclone Nargis in 2008.
Crowds lined the roads to shout support to Suu Kyi at every major town along her four-hour drive south from Yangon to Pathein, the Irrawaddy’s regional capital.
More than 10,000 people packed into a sports stadium under a sweltering sun to hear her speak.
One giant banner strung through the stands hailed Suu Kyi, the longtime political prisoner, as “Mother Democracy.”
Suu Kyi’s return to politics is another test of the reforms of the new nominally civilian government that took power last year after decades of military control.
Her latest trip came a day after the Election Commission formally accepted her candidacy for an April parliamentary by-election.
Suu Kyi last visited the Irrawaddy region during a campaign tour in 1989, when soldiers in the town of Danuphyu briefly pointed their rifles at her.It was one of several dramatic confrontations with the ruling military junta ahead of 1990 elections, which Suu Kyi’s party won but the junta refused to recognise.
“I remember the last time I was here 20 years ago,” Suu Kyi told the ecstatic crowd, where some fainted under the hot sun.”I see the same kind of support,” she said.
Edit This
The Nobel Peace laureate traveled for the first time in two decades to the Irrawaddy delta, Myanmar’s rice bowl and the region most devastated by Cyclone Nargis in 2008.
Crowds lined the roads to shout support to Suu Kyi at every major town along her four-hour drive south from Yangon to Pathein, the Irrawaddy’s regional capital.
More than 10,000 people packed into a sports stadium under a sweltering sun to hear her speak.
One giant banner strung through the stands hailed Suu Kyi, the longtime political prisoner, as “Mother Democracy.”
Suu Kyi’s return to politics is another test of the reforms of the new nominally civilian government that took power last year after decades of military control.
Her latest trip came a day after the Election Commission formally accepted her candidacy for an April parliamentary by-election.
Suu Kyi last visited the Irrawaddy region during a campaign tour in 1989, when soldiers in the town of Danuphyu briefly pointed their rifles at her.It was one of several dramatic confrontations with the ruling military junta ahead of 1990 elections, which Suu Kyi’s party won but the junta refused to recognise.
“I remember the last time I was here 20 years ago,” Suu Kyi told the ecstatic crowd, where some fainted under the hot sun.”I see the same kind of support,” she said.
Edit This
No comments:
Post a Comment