Aung San Suu Kyi: Biography, Profile

Aun San Suu Kyi, pro-democracy leader of the opposition party of Myanmar has created a history on Sunday by winning a parliamentary by-elections. If the victory is confirmed officially, it would be a milestone in the history of Myanmar, which has been in the military rule for over half a century. Here are some key events in the life of Ms Suu Kyi, who became the face of Myanmar's struggle for democracy while locked under house arrest for two decades:

EARLY LIFE
- June 19, 1945: Born in Yangon, then called Rangoon. She is the daughter of national hero General Aung San and Daw Khin Kyi, also a prominent public figure.
- July 1947: Aung San and six members of his interim government are assassinated by rivals. Ms Suu Kyi is 2 years old.
- 1960: After finishing high school, she leaves for further study in New Delhi, where her mother is Burma's ambassador. She later moves to England to study at Oxford University.
- 1972: Marries Michael Aris, an Oxford University academic. Son Alexander born in 1973, son Kim born in 1977.
 
POLITICAL LIFE
- April 1988: Ms Suu Kyi returns home to attend to her ailing mother just as pro-democracy protests erupt against the military junta. Her mother dies later that year.
- Aug. 8-11, 1988: Mass demonstrations throughout Burma. Security forces open fire on demonstrators. Hundreds are killed.
- September 1988: Ms Suu Kyi helps found opposition party, the National League for Democracy.
- June 1989: The government renames the country Myanmar and the capital Yangon.
- July 1989: Ms Suu Kyi, an increasingly outspoken critic of the junta, and her deputy, Tin Oo, are put under house arrest.
- May 1990: The junta calls general elections. Ms Suu Kyi's party wins a landslide victory, but the military refuses to hand over power.
- October 1991: Ms Suu Kyi is awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for her peaceful struggle against the regime.
- July 1995: Ms Suu Kyi is released from house arrest but remains in Myanmar, fearing she will never be let back into the country if she leaves.
- March 1999: Mr Aris, who has not seen his wife since 1995 because the junta repeatedly denied him a visa, dies of cancer in England.
- September 2000: Ms Suu Kyi is placed under house arrest after attempting to leave Yangon for a political meeting.
- May 2002: Ms Suu Kyi is released from house arrest.
- May 2003: Ms Suu Kyi is put back under house arrest. She is taken into "protective custody" after her motorcade is ambushed by a government-backed mob.
- August 2007: Protests start over fuel price increases, then swell into the largest pro-democracy demonstrations since 1988. The movement was dubbed the "Saffron Revolution" because it was led by saffron-robed Buddhist monks.
- Aug. 11, 2009: Ms Suu Kyi's detention is extended by 18 months when a court convicts her of violating her house arrest by briefly sheltering an American intruder who swam to her house uninvited.
- Nov. 7, 2010: Myanmar's first elections in 20 years. Pro-junta party wins landslide victory in polls critics say were rigged and rampant with fraud.
- Nov. 13, 2010: Ms Suu Kyi's detention expires and she is freed.
- Jan. 18, 2012: Ms Suu Kyi registers for April 1 by-election, kicking off a campaign that draws ecstatic nationwide support.
- April 1, 2012: By-elections to fill 45 seats in the 664-seat parliament. Mrs Suu Kyi's party says she wins a seat, in what would mark her first elected office after two decades as a symbolic opposition leader.

 

 

 

Modi Is Not Our PM: Owaisi

MIM is a recognized state political party based in the Indian state of Telangana, with its head office in the old city of Hyderabad, which has its roots in the Majlis-e-Ittehadul Muslimeen founded in 1927. Unlike most of the regional and national level parties, MIM party leaders ‘fight’ only for the well-being of Muslims, whereas no other party has such communal feelings. In their each and every speech, MIM leaders speak only about Muslims. If these leaders are here to fight for Muslims, then why there are no development works are happening in old city area for decades. Akbaruddin Owaisi faced criticism for making hate remarks on Narendra Modi and Hindus. Recently, his elder brother Asaduddin Owaisi made some notorious annotations. In a one-on-one debate between BJP spokesperson Sambit Patra and Asaduddin Owaisi on the topic of demonetization in a popular Hindi channel, the former left no stone unturned in exposing the latter’s communal designs. Owaisi claimed how most of the Muslim community still remains unbanked and that demonetization has caused severe inconvenience to Muslims. He even went on to say that ATM’s in Muslim-dominated areas weren’t fed enough money. He indirectly alleged that the Modi government hadn’t done anything for Muslims. Even after being pressurized Owaisi didn’t call Narendra Modi as his Prime Minister. He went on said, “Your Prime Minister…” On the other hand, Sambit spoke wisely and called Owaisi a leader of small stature because he talked only of Muslims. He said that no area was Muslim or Hindu and that all areas belonged to India. Owaisi was constantly quoting an RBI report, to which Sambit challenged him to show where the RBI had used the word ‘Muslim’. Sambit even said that if a Muslim leader speaks of Muslims it’s not an issue, but the moment a VHP leader speaks of Hindus people go crazy accusing them of imposing the Hindutva ideology. The most amazing of his counters was to Owaisi’s claims of Muslims not having been brought into the banking system. Sambit said that when banks or ATMs are to be opened in Muslim areas leaders like Owaisi shout that banking is un-Islamic and that Muslims should refrain from it! This video of debate between Sambit Patra and Asaduddin Owaisi is going viral in social media.