Suu Kyi resumes election campaign in Myanmar north

Suu Kyi resumes election campaign in Myanmar north
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Summary Suu Kyi will fly to Myitkyina in Kachin state to deliver an afternoon speech at a political rally.

Myanmar pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi takes her partys election campaign to the countrys conflict-riven far north Thursday in a bid to bolster support among ethnic minorities.The Nobel Peace Prize laureate was due to fly to Myitkyina in Kachin state to deliver an afternoon speech at a political rally, as her National League for Democracy (NLD) party gears up for April 1 by-elections.Aung San Suu Kyi is coming here not only for campaigning but also to bring unity, NLD senior member Win Mya Mya told AFP at Myitkyina airport, where a crowd of about 200 supporters were waiting to greet the opposition leader.Some held the NLDs fighting-peacock flag, while others wore T-shirts bearing Suu Kyis image.Im very happy. I want to see her in person as I havent seen her before. She is one of the women martyrs as well as a Nobel Peace laureate, said an ethnic Kachin supporter, Khaug Nyoi.We want to achieve peace through peaceful means, she added.The polls, which will see Suu Kyi stand for a seat in parliament for the first time in a constituency near Yangon, are viewed as a key test of the military-backed governments commitment to nascent reforms.Bloody fighting has raged between government troops and ethnic minority guerrillas in parts of Kachin since June last year, displacing tens of thousands of people.Suu Kyi -- sometimes distrusted by ethnic minorities -- has called for an immediate end to the violence.There has been resentment of Chinese-backed hydropower projects in the area, where the government in September ordered a halt to construction of a controversial $3.6 billion mega dam following rare public opposition.Myanmars regime held tentative peace talks with representatives of the Kachin Independence Organisation last month in China, with the two sides agreeing to hold further negotiations in search of an end to the conflict.The olive branch to the Kachin and other rebels is one of a number of reformist steps by the new government which took power last year, although deep distrust about their sincerity lingers in ethnic conflict zones.Civil war has gripped parts of Myanmar since independence in 1948. An end to the conflicts and alleged rights abuses involving government troops is a key demand of Western nations which impose sanctions on the regime.Suu Kyis two-day visit to Kachin is seen as a gesture of support for the minority groups, although she is expected to steer clear of the actual conflict zones.Her decision to stand for a seat in parliament is the latest sign of dramatic change taking place in the country formerly known as Burma after the end last year of nearly half a century of outright military rule.The regime has surprised observers with a series of reforms, welcoming Suu Kyis party back into mainstream politics and releasing hundreds of political prisoners.The opposition cannot threaten the ruling partys majority even if it takes all 48 available seats in the April by-elections, but a Suu Kyi win would lend legitimacy to the fledgling parliament.Her NLD party won a landslide victory in an election in 1990, but the then-ruling junta never allowed the party to take power.A November 2010 election which swept the armys political allies to power was marred by widespread complaints of cheating and by the absence of Suu Kyi, who was under house arrest at the time.The NLD complained on Monday that the fairness of the April vote was also threatened because it was being denied the use of suitable venues for its rallies, but just hours later it said the restrictions had been eased.

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