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Then, Suu Kyi was finally freed from house arrest, rejuvenating her pro-democracy movement while she herself
-- in her mid-60s -- has shown signs of fatigue in campaign appearances that have drawn large, enthusiastic crowds. Suu Kyi was supposedly loathed by the former military leader, Senior Gen. Than Shwe, who stepped down after the 2010 elections. But she says she trusts Thein Sein and his promise of a kinder, gentler Myanmar. She has acknowledged that her party will have no substantial power even it if wins all 45 seats that it is contesting, but hopes to give voice to the "aspirations" of the people. Thein Sein's government needs Suu Kyi's participation because of her prestige in the international community as standard-bearer for Myanmar's democracy movement whose courage won her a Nobel Peace prize. She commands considerable influence on policymakers, especially in the United States. To woo Washington, Thein Sein must curry favor with Suu Kyi. THE FUTURE: Both sides are playing for future benefits, but the path seems clearer for the military: Provide enough democracy to keep Suu Kyi in line and satisfy Western nations so that they drop their sanctions, and use the anticipated inflows of investment to jump-start the economy. Critics fear that Suu Kyi could become marginalized or co-opted in parliament. But if her party plays by the government's rules, it could provide the party's long-suffering organizers the kind of breathing space they never before enjoyed. Suu Kyi has said repeatedly that the party will work outside the legislature as well as inside. Many of the country's best-known pro-democracy activists, released from prison under Thein Sein's amnesties and unbowed by their incarceration, have vowed their support for Suu Kyi. If the party can rebuild itself, it can mount a campaign for a general election in 2015 that could pose a real challenge to military-backed rule. Whether the military allows a victory by Suu Kyi and her supporters in that vote
-- or squashes the result, as it did in 1990 -- will be the true test of its commitment to democracy.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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