Aung San Suu Kyi — "We have to accept the fact that we are a diverse country."
We have to accept the fact that we are a diverse country.
We have to accept the fact that we are a diverse country.
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"We have to be patient."
"I am not afraid of criticism."
"Peace and a federal democratic union are closely intertwined and that's why we need to change the constitution. The most important thing is national reconciliation."
"There are many, many, many Buddhists who have also left the country for various reasons."
"India had drawn away from us in our very difficult days. But I had faith in the lasting friendship between the two countries based on lasting friendship between our two peoples."
Burmese pro-democracy leader and Nobel Peace laureate (1991) who spent 15 years under house arrest before her party's 2015 election win. Closely associated with Václav Havel (Czech dissident-turned-president) and Nelson Mandela (the moral-leader template she was often compared to). For an intellectual contrast, see Min Aung Hlaing, Myanmar military commander-in-chief — deposed Suu Kyi in the 2021 coup and continues to detain her — the institutional military power her movement spent decades resisting.
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