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  • Aung San Suu Kyi was one of the world’s most famous political prisoners.

  • Now she is a beloved politician in Myanmar.

  • She helped the country restore democracy...

  • After 62 years of British colonial rule

  • 3 years of Japanese occupation...

  • And another 50 years under the rule of an oppressive military junta.

  • And she did it while being locked in her home.

  • This is how a political prisoner won the esteem of the international community, got elected

  • leader of her country, and is now at risk of losing the respect of the world.

  • Aung San Suu Kyi was born in 1945 in Rangoon, now Yangon, to Buddhist, Bamar parents, Myanmar’s

  • dominant ethnic group that makes up nearly 70 percent of the population.

  • Her father, Aung San, was a general who led the push to end British colonial rule.

  • In 1947, during an executive council meeting to discuss the transition to independence

  • a group of gunmen burst in and opened fire.

  • No one knows exactly who sent these gunmen, but they shot dead, seven or eight people.

  • One of them was Aung San, Suu Kyi's father.

  • She was only two years old at the time.

  • That’s Bloomberg Editor Jason Koutsoukis.

  • I’m the Southeast Asia Government Editor for Bloomberg News.

  • After the death of her father, the country completed the transition to become a democratic

  • republic, with the official name Union of Burma.

  • When she was 15, Suu Kyi moved to New Delhi after her mother was appointed ambassador

  • to India.

  • After finishing high school, she went to Oxford University, where she studied philosophy,

  • politics and economics.

  • She graduated in 1968 and moved to New York City, where she worked at the United Nations.

  • In 1972 she married British academic Michael Aris, they had two sons, later returning to England.

  • One of the conditions Aung San Suu Kyi had set at the start of the marriage was, if ever

  • she felt that her country needed her, she would go back.

  • In 1988 Suu Kyi did return to Burma after her mother suffered a stroke.

  • While there she became involved with the student protest movement that was rising up against

  • the military regime.

  • What we want the military to dois keep out of politics.

  • We don’t want the military to split up.

  • We want the armed forces to keep together but keep out of politics.

  • This movement was building and you could see which way the wind was blowing.

  • It wasn't just luck.

  • She didn't just happen to be there.

  • This was definitely something that she always felt deeply about.

  • The liberation leader’s daughter tapped her father’s contacts and formed a political

  • party - the National League for Democracy.

  • Soon afterwards she was elected its secretary general.

  • Seen as a threat to the junta, Suu Kyi was put under house arrest.

  • And there she stayed for almost 15 of the next 21 years.

  • Her husband died in 1999.

  • while she was locked up.

  • She received the international media when she was under house arrest and she was very

  • successful in creating a brand, She is one of those real stand out figures from the 1980s

  • and 1990s who won a Nobel Peace Prize.

  • Propelled by international pressure, the government finally released Suu Kyi on November 13, 2010.

  • Five years later the NLD swept to power in elections and she finally took charge of the

  • country.

  • Constitutionally barred from becoming president for being the mother of foreigners - a provision

  • apparently inserted by the military specifically targeting her - Suu Kyi instead

  • took the title of State Counselor.

  • I think it's probably no longer applicable to say she's the de facto leader of Myanmar

  • because in practice she really is the leader of the country.

  • Her popularity and authority has not been questioned.

  • Until now.

  • The Nobel Peace Prize she won in 1991 while under house arrest wasfor her non-violent

  • struggle for democracy and human rights."

  • Although the scope of her control over the military is unclear, she is facing calls from

  • petitioners to be stripped of the award for not doing enough to stop the military repression

  • and forced exodus of the Rohingya, a Muslim minority living near the Bangladesh border.

  • More than 600,000 Rohingya have fled into Bangladesh since August.

  • The United Nations has called it ethnic cleansing, while Suu Kyi and the military say they are

  • seeking to root out terrorists.

  • I think there is a sense of bewilderment among most people

  • in Myanmar at the response to the Rohingya crisis.

  • They see the Rohingya as people who don't belong in their country.

  • They just cannot understand

  • why Myanmar is being criticized so harshly overseas.

  • Suu Kyi is resisting growing international pressure to denounce the alleged human rights

  • abuses being committed against the Rohingya.

  • Instead, she’s showing a more ruthless determination to hang onto power no matter what cost to

  • her international reputation.

  • The government has been making every effort to restore peace and stability and to promote

  • harmony between the Muslim and Rakhine communities.

  • She's come down decisively in favor of majority public opinion on this issue.

  • That's one of the reasons she has remained so popular at home throughout this crisis.

  • The same global audience that transformed her into a political star is now demanding

  • she take a stand.

  • This security council and the United Stations to take strong and stiff action to bring this

  • crisis to an end.

  • Whether she can stem the tide of international condemnation and once again become a symbol

  • of human rights remains to be seen.

Aung San Suu Kyi was one of the world’s most famous political prisoners.

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スーチーはいかにして政治犯からリーダーになったか (How Suu Kyi Went From Political Prisoner to Leader)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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