Lawrence J.
Haas
Read Larry's bio and previous columns
May 19, 2009
Burma’s Aung San Suu Kyi: Diplomacy, Human Rights – And a Brave Woman
She sits mostly alone,
a woman of fragile health but breathtaking courage – a solitary figure
who represents the aspirations of 47 million fellow citizens of Burma
and of millions living in oppression elsewhere.
She is Aung San Suu Kyi,
who is to Burma what Nelson Mandela was to South Africa and Natan
Sharansky was to the former Soviet Union – a symbol of hope in a land of
brutality. She is a petite woman of 63, an inspiring democratic activist
and Nobel Prize winner who, at this writing, faces trial on charges that
seem designed to prevent her from threatening the iron rule of Burma’s
military junta.
The charges against
her, which come just as she is finishing a six-year home detention and
which could send her to jail for another five years, arise from a
bizarre incident in which a U.S. citizen swam across a lake to her
beachfront property and, despite her requests that he leave, spent a
night or two on the grounds. For that, the junta has charged her with
violating the terms of her detention.
To its credit,
Washington (along with governments in Europe and Asia) has reacted
angrily to the charges, urging the junta to release Suu Kyi and more
than 2,000 political opponents that it is holding.
But her travails
highlight the multiple risks inherent in Washington’s efforts to improve
U.S. relations with authoritarian regimes in Russia, Iran, Syria – and
even Burma – at the apparent expense of human rights concerns.
In seeking such warmer
relations, Washington is, not surprisingly, eschewing or downplaying
efforts to assist democratic activists in their efforts to overthrow or
reform unpopular regimes. That policy risks alienating hundreds of
millions of people across the world who seek the freedom, democracy and
human rights that America personifies and, in earlier eras, has promoted
forcefully.
In some nations,
Washington may miss an opportunity for change that its support could
help generate. In others, the change may occur anyway, in which case
Washington will find itself aligned with an unpopular and then-defunct
regime.
Moreover, the issue of
human rights has implications beyond the question of how people live
their lives in far-flung nations. It matters for peace and stability. As
Soviet dissident Andrei Sakharov said, “A country that does not respect
the rights of its own people will not respect the rights of its
neighbors.”
Suu Kyi was born in
1945 to Aung San, a hero of Burma’s drive for independence from Great
Britain and its first prime minister before his assassination in 1947;
and Khin Kyi, Burma’s former ambassador to India.
After spending much of
her life abroad, she returned to Burma in 1988 to visit her ailing
mother, who had suffered a stroke. While there, and in the midst of a
popular uprising for democratic change, she co-founded the National
League for Democracy, promoting non-violent civil disobedience.
Placed under house
arrest in 1989, she nevertheless led her party to overwhelming victory a
year later in elections that the junta had thought it would win. The
junta refused to step aside and, rather than assume the presidency, Suu
Kyi remained in detention where she has spent 13 of the last 19 years.
While detained, she won
the Nobel Prize in 1991, which her two sons accepted on her behalf; the
Presidential Medal of Freedom in 2000; and many other awards. Also while
there, the junta refused her husband’s request in 1999 for a final visit
with her before he succumbed to prostate cancer.
The junta has offered
her opportunities to leave the country, but she has always refused. She
had no guarantee that the junta would allow her to return, and she would
not sacrifice her work for democratic change.
Today, Suu Kyi sits in
a special section of Insein Prison, home to many political prisoners,
where conditions are notoriously poor, even for young people in good
health. Tuberculosis, mosquitoes, other insects, oppressive heat and the
lack of fresh air are among the things with which prisoners must
contend.
In the days ahead, we
should keep this extraordinary woman in our thoughts – and we should
urge Washington to maintain its public outage – however much its calls
to protect human rights may complicate its diplomatic agenda. For her
continued imprisonment diminishes not just her, but us.
As President Kennedy
said at Berlin’s Brandenburg Gate in 1963, “Freedom is indivisible, and
when one man is enslaved, all are not free.”
© 2009
North Star Writers Group. May not be republished without permission.
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