Aung San Suu Kyi

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Aung San Suu Kyi

It was unthinkable. The wildest dream ever. To talk to Aung San Suu Kyi, the Myanmar democracy icon and 1991 Nobel Peace Prize laureate, a few days after she was released from15 years of incarceration, was next to impossible in 2010. Calling Myanmar was like dialling a distant planet.

“Are you crazy? BBC and CNN guys are still stuck in Bangkok trying to get a visa. And you want to talk to Daw on the phone?” retorted a Myanmar opposition leader living in exile in Thailand.

I replied with an affirmative YES.

“Do you know she has no cell phone and the army hasn’t allowed her a landline?”

“I don’t care. I MUST talk to her.”

A series of secret facsimile messages were since sent from Bangkok to a spokesperson of the opposition National League for Democracy (NLD) in Myanmar. An old NLD leader having a cell phone connection was arranged to visit her, and the time I should call the number was fixed. It was as precise as a surgical operation. The phone that rang after twenty minutes of relentless dialling was passed on to the then 65-year-old Oxonian who said a hello as sanguient as a hero. The rest’s history. And a world exclusive.

THE ROAD TO SUU KYI

It was unthinkable. The wildest dream ever. To talk to Aung San Suu Kyi, the Myanmar democracy icon and 1991 Nobel Peace Prize laureate, a few days after she was released from15 years of incarceration, was next to impossible in 2010. Calling Myanmar was like dialling a distant planet.

“Are you crazy? BBC and CNN guys are still stuck in Bangkok trying to get a visa. And you want to talk to Daw on the phone?” retorted a Myanmar opposition leader living in exile in Thailand. I replied with an affirmative YES. “Do you know she has no cell phone and the army hasn’t allowed her a landline?”

“I don’t care. I MUST talk to her.” A series of secret facsimile messages were since sent from Bangkok to a spokesperson of the opposition National League for Democracy (NLD) in Myanmar. An old NLD leader having a cell phone connection was arranged to visit her, and the time I should call the number was fixed. It was as precise as a surgical operation. The phone that rang after twenty minutes of relentless dialling was passed on to the then 65-year-old Oxonian who said a hello as sanguient as a hero. The rest’s history. And a world exclusive.

“My dream is the dream of all the others who went before me. We just dream of a strong and united people, who can carve out their own destiny in peace and prosperity.”

— Aung San Suu Kyi

“I don’t think I have made a sacrifice. I made a choice. If anybody made a sacrifice, it was my husband and sons who allowed me to do what I believed in.”

— Aung San Suu Kyi