Clinton warns Suu Kyi: Democracy isn’t easy
US: US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Monday offered advice
for Myanmar’s democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi as she enters parliament
-- it isn’t easy. Clinton, a former first lady and senator who made a
run for the US presidency in 2008, hailed Suu Kyi at the US premiere of
“The Lady,” a biopic on the Nobel peace laureate by French director Luc
Besson. “I did tell her in one of our recent telephone conversations --
she was moving from an icon to a politician. Having made sort of the
same journey to some extent, I know that that’s not easy,” Clinton said.
“Now you go to a parliament and you start compromising, which is what
democracy is all about. It’s not a dirty word,” Clinton said at the
screening at the headquarters of the Motion Picture Association of
America.
Clinton said that she told Suu Kyi that she will “have to work with
other people, some of whom you disagree with deeply.” “But it is part of
the commitment you make to a democratic process, even one as fragile as
that being embraced by the leadership and the people of Burma,” she
said, referring to Myanmar by its former name.
Suu Kyi, who had spent most of the past two decades under house
arrest, won her first seat in parliament in April 1 elections which were
the most visible sign yet of reforms by reform-minded President Thein
Sein.
Clinton last week announced a set of rewards to encourage further
reforms in Myanmar, including an easing of longstanding restrictions on
US investment and financial services in the resource-rich but
impoverished nation.
Clinton, who met Suu Kyi for the first time on a landmark December
visit to Yangon, reiterated her hopes for further actions in Myanmar
including a release of remaining political prisoners and resolution of
longstanding ethnic conflicts.
AFP
|