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What does Aung San Suu Kyi do? Some details about her hunger.
biographical notes

Date of birth: June 1945+09.

Place of birth: Yangon, Myanmar

Origin: Myanmar

Family status: Father General Aung San (leader of Myanmar independence movement)

Xiong' ang mountain' ao

Husband (Aris died of cancer on 1999)

The eldest son Alexander (born in 1973)

Second son Jin (real name Jin) (1977)

Academic Calendar: Degree in Politics, Economics and Philosophy from Oxford University (1967).

Award winning record: Nobel Peace Prize (199 1 year).

Brief experience:

1964- 1967 Studying in the UK

1969- 197 1 Assistant Secretary, United Nations Office in new york.

1972 married Aris in England.

1985- 1986 visiting scholar, center for south Asian studies, Kyoto university, Japan.

1988 In September, I learned that my mother had a stroke and returned to China alone.

After returning home, she witnessed many students being suppressed by guns, which inspired her determination to fight for democracy for the people and became the co-founder and general secretary of the National League for Democracy.

1On July 20, 989, the Burmese military government began house arrest for six years on the charge of "endangering the country", during which the family only got together four times.

1On May 27th, 990, the National League for Democracy won the general election with overwhelming votes, but the military government rejected the election result.

1991July 10 won the nobel peace prize.

1995 released in July. The husband went to Myanmar to see him again, but this trip was the last time they got together.

Her husband Aris was allowed to visit her for the last time in 1996, and was forbidden to set foot in Myanmar for life. In the same year, she was accused of inciting student demonstrations and was placed under house arrest again.

1In July 1998, the Burmese military government banned her from meeting members of the National League for Democracy.

1On March 27th, 999, her husband died of advanced prostate cancer in London. The military government approved her to go abroad to attend the funeral, but she refused.

On May 2, 2000, the official newspaper said that she might be sentenced to death for treason.

In September 2000, he was placed under house arrest again because he wanted to go to the northern city of Mandalay in violation of the military ban.

From June 5, 2000 to 10, a secret dialogue was held with the military government.

In May 2002, the military government reported that she would be released in a day or two.

On May 6th, 2002, she was placed under house arrest 19 months by the Burmese military government and finally regained her freedom. She is free to participate in any political activities in the future.

Aung San Suu Kyi, born in June, 1945 in Yangon, Myanmar, is a non-violent politician who advocates democracy in Myanmar. She won the Sakharov Prize on 1990 and the Nobel Peace Prize the following year.

Her father, General Aung San, negotiated Myanmar's independence with Britain in 1947, and was assassinated by political opponents in the same year. Aung San Suu Kyi studied at Oxford University in England, where she met her husband michael aris (they have two children). She is also studying at the School of Asian and African Studies, University of London.

She returned to Myanmar on 1988 to take care of her sick mother. In the same year, General Wu Naiwen, the long-time leader of the Socialist Party, stepped down and a large-scale democratic demonstration broke out, but it was brutally suppressed. A new military government then came to power. Deeply influenced by Mahatma Gandhi's theory of non-violence, Aung San Suu Kyi began to participate in politics and the democratic process, and was placed under house arrest from 65438 to 0989. She refused to be deported and released.

The military government held a general election in 1990, and Aung San Suu Kyi's political party "National League for Democracy" gained absolute advantage. Under normal circumstances, she should become the prime minister of the country, but the election results were invalidated and the military government refused to hand over power. The international response was great, which indirectly contributed to her winning the Sakharov Prize and the Nobel Peace Prize. She set up a trust with the Nobel Peace Prize of $654.38+$300,000 to contribute to the health and education of the people of Myanmar.

She was released in July 1995. She knows very well that if she leaves Myanmar to visit her family in England, she will not be able to enter the country again. As a result, she chose to stay and never saw her husband again. Her husband died on 1999.

She was repeatedly prevented from meeting supporters of her political party and was placed under house arrest again in September 2000. On May 6, 2002, she was released after secret consultations based on mutual trust under the auspices of the United Nations. A government spokesman said that she was released because "we believe we can trust each other". Aung San Suu Kyi later said that this was "a new dawn for the country". However, she was arrested again at the end of May 2003. After a period of detention and an operation in September, she has been under house arrest in Yangon until now. On March 2, 2004, Ismail, the special envoy of the United Nations for Myanmar affairs, visited Aung San Suu Kyi, the leader of Myanmar democracy, and held talks with Myanmar Prime Minister Qin Niu, once again trying to push the two sides to start talks.

Representative politics

Fear and freedom