Google – AFP, 28 November 2013
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Myanmar
opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi (C) is greeted by Lowe Institute
chairman
Frank Lowe (L) in Sydney on November 28, 2013 (AFP, Greg Wood)
|
Sydney —
Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi on Thursday insisted she was no
saint and no icon, saying she disliked the titles and had always seen herself
as an honest politician.
The
celebrated activist and democracy champion endured years of house arrest at the
hands of Myanmar's military regime and has been feted since her release, but
she insisted she was just an ordinary person.
"I
always thought that I was a politician, I look upon myself as a politician, not
as an icon," she told an audience in Sydney during her first visit to
Australia.
"I
always object to the word icon, because it's very static, it stands there, sits
there, hangs on the wall, and I happen to work very, very hard."
The Nobel
Peace Prize winner said she disliked being called a saint even more than an
icon.
"Let
me assure you I am no saint of any kind; this I find very troubling, because
politicians are politicians, but I do believe there is such a thing as an
honest politician and I aspire to that," she said.
The
Oxford-trained daughter of the country's independence hero was released from
house arrest in 2010 and said her dream for the country under the reformist
government of President Thein Sein was "unity".
During her
trip to Australia, Suu Kyi will also visit Melbourne and Canberra, meeting
Prime Minister Tony Abbott and Foreign Minister Julie Bishop.

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