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Aung San Suu Kyi Addresses Both Houses Of Parliament

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The Parliamentary Information Office of the Parliamentary Yearbook adds to the welcome given by Members of both houses when she addressed them yesterday
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Aung San Suu Kyi Addresses Both Houses Of Parliament


The Parliamentary Information Office of the Parliamentary Yearbook adds to the
welcome given by Members of both houses when she addressed them yesterday

Nobel prize winner and newly elected parliamentarian Aung San Suu Kyi addressed
members of both Houses in Westminster Hall yesterday (Thursday 21 June) at 3pm during
her visit to the UK and became the first non-head of State and only the second woman to
address both houses. The other is of course Her Majesty the Queen.

Commons Speaker, John Bercow MP, gave a welcome address introducing Aung San Suu
Kyi's speech. Mr Bercow said:

"This Hall has hosted many events over the past 900 years. In recent times only a few
international figures - Charles de Gaulle, Nelson Mandela, Pope Benedict XVI and Barack
Obama - have spoken here. Today Daw Aung San Suu Kyi will become the first figure other
than a Head of State, the first woman from abroad and the first citizen of Asia to do so.

"This is not a break from precedent without a purpose. The courage of our guest is
legendary. She has withstood the unimaginable suffering of separation from her family and
her people with a dignity, fortitude and resolve which most of us can barely conceive. Her
connections with the United Kingdom, reinforced in Oxford yesterday, are intimate. She has
been the symbol of resistance to a regime which even in an imperfect world has been
exceptional in its barbarity. As the UN has documented, and from three trips to Burma's
borders I can myself attest, this is a cabal guilty of rape as a weapon of war, extra-judicial
killings, compulsory relocation, forced labour, deployment of child soldiers, use of human
minesweepers, incarceration of opponents in unspeakable conditions, destruction of villages,
obstruction of aid and excruciating torture. Burma has become a beautiful but benighted land
where fear runs through society like blood flowing through veins. One woman has now
defied a dictatorship of such depravity for two decades. That is why Daw Aung San Suu Kyi,
a leader and a stateswoman, is here with us this afternoon.

"However, there is room for cautious optimism. The recent election to Parliament of our
guest, accompanied by 42 of her colleagues, and the release of many political prisoners are
welcome signs of reform. We earnestly hope that further, and fundamental, reform will
ultimately lead to the freedom, democracy and rule of law which we have so long enjoyed
and the people of Burma have too long been denied. There is an Asian saying that a journey
of a thousand miles must start with a single step. We are proud that one such step will be
taken in this Parliament today.

"Parliamentary colleagues, ladies and gentlemen, it is my privilege to welcome the
conscience of a country and a heroine for humanity, Daw Aung San Suu Kyi."

In her address she said it was important to empower the people of Burma, and now was her
country's time of greatest need. Ms Suu Kyi said:

"I am here in part to ask for practical help, help as a friend and an equal, in support of the
reforms which can bring better lives, greater opportunities, to the people of Burma who have
been for so long deprived of their rights and their place in the world.

"My country today stands at the start of a journey towards, I hope, a better future. So many
hills remain to be climbed, chasms to be bridged, obstacles to be breached.

"Our own determination can get us so far. The support of the people of Britain and of
peoples around the world can get us so much further."


She stressed that it had been less than 100 days since she was on the campaign trail in
Burma and went on to have the electoral success that that has made her opposition leader
in parliament.

This remarkable personal transition encourages her in her belief that "before too long"
Burma will become a truly democratic society."

But she warns that Burma's transition will be tough - "the most difficult road we have ever
walked", she said in the address.

Vital, in her view, is help in building Burma's democratic institutions and education, and
developing a "clean and efficient" civil service.

Ms Suu Kyi concluded her speech by saying there was a lot more work to be done before
reform in Burma was complete.

She said: "I would ask that our friends, both here in Britain and beyond, participate in and
support Burma's efforts towards the establishment of a truly democratic and just society."

Lord Speaker, Baroness D'Souza, gave a valedictory address thanking Aung San Suu Kyi
following her speech. She said:
"On behalf of the House of Lords, and everyone here today, may I express our collective and
heartfelt thanks for your inspiring words.

"We all espouse freedom and democracy but few of us are called upon to pay for and uphold
these principles by spending 15 years in detention. Your presence here today is a testament
to your courageous approach of steadfast non-violence and reason in the face of an
oppressive, powerful and determined regime.

"Your struggle has reverberated around the world. It has forcibly reminded us that free and
fair elections, a free press, an independent judiciary, and the institutions of civil society are
the cornerstones of democracy and individual freedom. We take these freedoms for granted
at our peril. Democracy is never won once and forever - it is a process requiring constant
vigilance. Today you have reminded us of the struggle that must continue in Burma and
elsewhere.

"In post-war Europe we have seen that it is possible for countries to make the transition from
totalitarianism to democracy, and I trust that this will give you hope and encouragement for
the journey ahead.

"Your stand against repression has been at the heart of the National League for
Democracy's struggle. I am sure that at times during your long campaign you must have felt
unbearably lonely, though as you yourself have said, the Nobel Peace Prize allowed you to
feel part of the international community. And indeed, through you, your people and your
country were always in our minds.

"Now, together, we must use this occasion of your address to fellow parliamentarians to
renew our own determination to be part of the struggle for liberty whenever and wherever it
arises."

The proprietors and staff of the Parliamentary Yearbook add to those good wishes and will
follow closely Burma's transition to a true democracy.

Web: www.parliamentaryyearbookinformationoffice.co.uk

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