Posted: 08 May 2012 1823 hrs ...
YANGON: Myanmar has
issued opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi with a passport, her party
said on Tuesday, as the former political prisoner prepares to travel
abroad for the first time in 24 years.Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi. (AFP PHOTO/ Soe Than WIN)
The 66-year-old democracy
icon, who spent much of the last two decades locked up in her Yangon
home by Myanmar's former junta, plans to visit Oslo next month to
finally accept her 1991 Nobel Peace Prize in person.
"We were
informed on Friday that Daw Suu got her passport. Her passport is in her
hand now," Nyan Win, spokesman for the veteran activist's National
League for Democracy (NLD) party, told AFP. Daw is a term of respect in
Myanmar.
Suu Kyi began applying for her Myanmar travel documents
soon after she was elected to parliament in landmark April 1
by-elections seen as a key test of reforms under the new quasi-civilian
government that came to power last year.
As well as Norway, she
also intends to travel to Britain, where she lived for years with her
late husband and their two sons before she returned to Myanmar in the
late 1980s.
Nyan Win said the trip would go ahead in mid-June as previously expected.
Suu
Kyi, the daughter of Myanmar's independence hero General Aung San, was
thrust into the limelight as protests broke out against the junta while
she was visiting her homeland to care for her sick mother in 1988.
She
has not set foot outside Myanmar since, fearing that the generals who
ruled the nation for decades would prevent her from returning.
Her
decision to venture overseas has been seen as a sign of her confidence
in a new regime led by President Thein Sein, a former general, who began
a sweeping programme of reforms after coming to power last year.
"She can travel abroad freely," a government official told AFP on condition of anonymity.
Suu Kyi's fight for democracy in Myanmar has come at a great personal cost.
Her
British academic husband Michael Aris died in 1999 and she had only
limited contact with her sons during her many years of detention.
Nyan
Win in April said Suu Kyi planned to travel to her university town of
Oxford and meet her children during her visit to Britain.
She is also expected to give her long-awaited Nobel acceptance speech in Oslo.
The
democracy leader entered Myanmar's army-dominated parliament last week,
after initially delaying her debut in the legislature debut in a
dispute over the wording of an oath pledging to "safeguard" a
military-drafted constitution.
The NLD won 43 of the 45
parliamentary seats available in the by-election, although it does not
threaten the overwhelming majority held by the army-backed ruling party
and the military.
Myanmar's by-elections were hailed as further
progress towards democracy in the country, which was under an army
dictatorship for almost half a century, by the international community.
European
Union nations last month suspended most sanctions against the
resource-rich but poor nation for one year to reward the reforms, which
included releasing some political prisoners.
But the United States has ruled out an immediate end to its main sanctions.
- AFP/ck/de
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_asiapacific/view/1199991/1/.html
Wednesday, May 9, 2012
Aung San Suu Kyi granted Myanmar passport
4:36 PM
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