Nobel laureate Aung San Suu Kyi completed her first trip out of Myanmar in 24 years yesterday, a tour that highlighted her new freedom to explore the world — and to return home.
Aung San Suu Kyi smiled broadly as she walked through Yangon’s airport, escorted by senior officials from her opposition party. She waved to passengers and told reporters that her six-day trip to neighboring Thailand was “very satisfactory.”
“It was very successful,” she added, before getting into a waiting car.
The longtime political prisoner’s trip was viewed as proof of her confidence in Myanmar’s new civilian government, whose political reforms contrast starkly with that of the former military junta.
Aung San Suu Kyi, who spent 15 of the last two decades under house arrest, had previously refused to leave the country during brief periods of freedom for fear she would not be allowed to return.
She used her trip to draw attention to the plight of her compatriots abroad — from exploited migrant workers who moved to Thailand in search of jobs to war refugees who fled across the border in search of peace.
She stole the spotlight at the World Economic Forum on East Asia, delivering her first speech before an international audience since becoming Myanmar’s crusader for democracy in 1988.
During her speech before international investors and diplomats, Aung San Suu Kyi cautioned against what she called “reckless optimism” in Myanmar’s reform process.
She said she trusted Burmese President Thein Sein’s commitment to reforms, but noted that the military is still a force “to be reckoned with.”
In the middle of the month Aung San Suu Kyi begins the next leg of her international travels with a five-country tour to Europe that includes stops in Geneva, Oslo, Dublin, London and Paris. Among the highlights are her trip to Norway, where she will formally accept the Nobel Peace Prize she was awarded in 1991.
DIPLOMATIC THAW: The Canadian prime minister’s China visit and improved Beijing-Ottawa ties raised lawyer Zhang Dongshuo’s hopes for a positive outcome in the retrial China has overturned the death sentence of Canadian Robert Schellenberg, a Canadian official said on Friday, in a possible sign of a diplomatic thaw as Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney seeks to boost trade ties with Beijing. Schellenberg’s lawyer, Zhang Dongshuo (張東碩), yesterday confirmed China’s Supreme People’s Court struck down the sentence. Schellenberg was detained on drug charges in 2014 before China-Canada ties nosedived following the 2018 arrest in Vancouver of Huawei chief financial officer Meng Wanzhou (孟晚舟). That arrest infuriated Beijing, which detained two Canadians — Michael Spavor and Michael Kovrig — on espionage charges that Ottawa condemned as retaliatory. In January
Two medieval fortresses face each other across the Narva River separating Estonia from Russia on Europe’s eastern edge. Once a symbol of cooperation, the “Friendship Bridge” connecting the two snow-covered banks has been reinforced with rows of razor wire and “dragon’s teeth” anti-tank obstacles on the Estonian side. “The name is kind of ironic,” regional border chief Eerik Purgel said. Some fear the border town of more than 50,0000 people — a mixture of Estonians, Russians and people left stateless after the fall of the Soviet Union — could be Russian President Vladimir Putin’s next target. On the Estonian side of the bridge,
Jeremiah Kithinji had never touched a computer before he finished high school. A decade later, he is teaching robotics, and even took a team of rural Kenyans to the World Robotics Olympiad in Singapore. In a classroom in Laikipia County — a sparsely populated grasslands region of northern Kenya known for its rhinos and cheetahs — pupils are busy snapping together wheels, motors and sensors to assemble a robot. Guiding them is Kithinji, 27, who runs a string of robotics clubs in the area that have taken some of his pupils far beyond the rural landscapes outside. In November, he took a team
SHOW OF SUPPORT: The move showed that aggression toward Greenland is a question for Europe and Canada, and the consequences are global, not just Danish, experts said Canada and France, which adamantly oppose US President Donald Trump’s wish to control Greenland, were to open consulates in the Danish autonomous territory’s capital yesterday, in a strong show of support for the local government. Since returning to the White House last year, Trump has repeatedly insisted that Washington needs to control the strategic, mineral-rich Arctic island for security reasons. Trump last month backed off his threats to seize Greenland after saying he had struck a “framework” deal with NATO chief Mark Rutte to ensure greater US influence. A US-Denmark-Greenland working group has been established to discuss ways to meet Washington’s security concerns