Posted: 24 May 2012 0954 hrs  ... 
Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi. (AFP PHOTO/ Soe Than WIN)
YANGON: Myanmar pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi will 
travel overseas next week for the first time in more than two decades to
 attend an economic forum in Bangkok, her party said Thursday.
The
 former political prisoner's plan to leave her homeland for the first 
time since 1988 is the latest sign of dramatic political change sweeping
 through the country, where decades of outright military rule ended last
 year.
"She will go to the World Economic Forum (on East Asia) in
 Thailand," said Nyan Win, a spokesman for the Nobel laureate's National
 League for Democracy.
The gathering of senior government 
officials and business leaders from around the region is being held from
 May 30 to June 1 at a luxury hotel in the Thai capital.
Myanmar President Thein Sein will also attend the event, according to a government official who did not want to be named.
Suu
 Kyi was released from seven straight years of house arrest in November 
2010 and has now been issued with a passport, enabling her to travel 
abroad for the first time in 24 years.
She also plans to go to Europe where she will address an International Labour Organization conference in Geneva on June 14.
After
 that she will make a speech in Oslo on June 16 to accept the Nobel 
Peace Prize she was awarded in 1991 for her peaceful struggle for 
democracy, according to the Nobel Committee.
At the time her 
British husband Michael Aris, who died in 1999 while she remained 
imprisoned, and her two sons accepted the Nobel medal on her behalf.
Suu
 Kyi also intends to travel to Britain, where she lived for years with 
her family, and has been given the rare honour of addressing the 
country's parliament on June 21.
The daughter of Myanmar's 
independence hero General Aung San was thrust into the limelight as 
protests broke out against the former military government while she was 
visiting her homeland to care for her sick mother in 1988.
The 
military crushed the demonstrations and in July 1989 placed Suu Kyi 
under house arrest, 10 months after she helped form the National League 
for Democracy.
Despite her confinement, the NLD won a landslide 
victory in 1990 elections, but the then-military government did not 
recognise the result.
She spent much of the two decades since 
then locked up in her Yangon home and has not set foot outside Myanmar, 
fearing that the generals would prevent her from returning.
Now 
66, Suu Kyi was released in November 2010 just days after another 
controversial election won by the military's political allies.
But
 since then Thein Sein, a former general, has won international praise 
for releasing hundreds of political prisoners and welcoming Suu Kyi and 
her party back into mainstream politics.
Myanmar's relations with
 the international community have improved dramatically since his 
nominally civilian government took over. Last month Suu Kyi won her 
first ever seat in parliament in by-elections.
In response the 
international community has begun to roll back sanctions against the 
impoverished country, led by the European Union which has suspended all 
measures except an arms embargo for one year.
- AFP/wm
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/afp_asiapacific/view/1203252/1/.html 
  



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