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| Crowds gather wherever Aung San Suu Kyi goes |
Burma:
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Burma's
pro-democracy leader, Aung San Suu Kyi, is visiting the coastal town of Dawei
on a political tour ahead of by-elections on 1 April.
It is the
first time she has ventured outside Rangoon for several months. The visit is
seen as a test of how freely she and her party are able to campaign.
Thousands
gathered to see the 66-year-old Nobel peace prize winner, who was released from
house arrest in 2010.
Burma's
military-backed government has embarked on a cautious reform process.
Aung San
Suu Kyi's party, the National League for Democracy (NLD) is contesting all the
available constituencies in the coming by-elections.
She herself
is seeking office in the rural township of Kawhmu.
An NLD
spokesman told the BBC Ms Suu Kyi's visit to Dawei was intended to help
organise the local party ahead of the elections.
However,
this is much more than just an administrative trip, says the BBC's Southeast
Asia correspondent, Rachel Harvey.
Wherever Ms
Suu Kyi goes, crowds gather, hoping to catch a glimpse of the woman who was
kept under house arrest for 15 of the last 23 years.
In Dawei
they stood by the road chanting: "Long live Aung San Suu Kyi."
AFP news
agency quoted her as telling supporters: "If we move in the right
direction our country will have many opportunities. We are eager to seize
them."
Reform
process
The Burmese
government is planning to build a huge industrial complex in Dawei, which could
transform the region.
Earlier
this month the authorities cancelled plans for a coal-fired power plant there
because of environmental concerns.
This was
widely seen as a victory for local activists and a sign that the process of
reform is developing, says our correspondent.
The poll in
April will be the first time that Ms Suu Kyi will participate directly in an
election. She was under house arrest in 1990 when the NLD won the election by a
landslide. It was not allowed to take power.
The NLD
boycotted the 2010 election that saw the military-backed civilian
administration of President Thein Sein replace the military junta.
The new
administration has since entered into dialogue with Ms Suu Kyi and has changed
the electoral laws that led to the NLD boycott.

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