Skip to main content

Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Aung San Suu Kyi speaks with supporters outside her home, where she was placed under house arrest for seven years, in Yangon November 13, 2010. Military-ruled Myanmar freed the Nobel Peace Prize-winner on Saturday after her latest period of house arrest expired, giving the country a powerful pro-democracy voice just days after a widely criticised election.Soe Zeya Tun

The world's most famous prisoner of conscience, Nobel Peace Prize laureate Aung San Suu Kyi, has been released from house arrest amid scenes of jubilation in Myanmar.

It's the first time she has been free to move outside her residence in Rangoon, the capital, since 2003.

Hundreds of supporters were already gathered outside her residence when a convoy of three official cars arrived to read her the release order. When armed riot police took down barricades outside her residence, the crowd surged forward to the gate of her property and began chanting: "Come out, come out Aung San Suu Kyi!"

As news spread that the woman known as The Lady was free, the crowd outside her residence quickly grew into the thousands.

Wearing a lilac dress, the diminutive 65-year-old walked out to meet her supporters, smiling and shaking hands.

"We must work together in unison to achieve our goal," she told them, struggling to make herself heard over the chants and cheers of her supporters. Some held mobile phones over their heads to take some of the first photographs of their hero in the last seven years.

Ms. Suu Kyi told her supporters to come to the headquarters of her National League for Democracy on Sunday, where she said she will give a speech. She's also widely expected to visit Rangoon's iconic Shwedagon Pagoda, where she famously addressed massive pro-democracy crowds in 1988.

Trucks filled with riot police were parked around the corner when Ms. Suu Kyi came out to meet her supporters but government forces made no move to break up the spontaneous celebration.

Her release follows weeks of speculation, and comes just days after a party affiliated with the ruling junta claimed a massive victory in elections held Nov. 7 that have been widely condemned as fraudulent.

Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper welcomed the release of Ms. Suu Kyi, calling her "an unwavering champion of peace."

"Neither her trial nor appeal process were conducted in line with international standards. She was not granted due process and should never have been detained," Mr. Harper in a statement issued from Yokohama, Japan, where he is attending a Pacific Rim summit.

Mr. Harper said Canada has long supported Ms. Suu Kyi in her efforts to bring genuine democracy to the country. In recognition of her struggle to promote fundamental freedoms and democratic principles, she was granted honorary Canadian citizenship by in 2007.

Mr. Harper said that the sanctions imposed against the regime in 2007 will remain in place despite the release.

British Prime Minister David Cameron said Ms. Suu Kyi's release was "long overdue," while French President Nicholas Sarkozy warned Myanmar's ruling junta against placing new restrictions on her.

"Aung San Suu Kyi is an inspiration for all of us who believe in freedom of speech, democracy and human rights," Mr. Cameron said in a statement. "Her detention was a travesty, designed only to silence the voice of the Burmese people. Freedom is Aung San Suu Kyi's right. The Burmese regime must now uphold it." Myanmar is also known as Burma.

Ms. Suu Kyi has already said she will seek to investigate the Nov. 7 vote, the first election held in the country since her National League for Democracy won a landslide in 1990, claiming 80 per cent of the seats in a result never honoured by the military.

Ms. Suu Kyi, who won the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize for leading a campaign of non-violent resistance to military rule, has been under some form of detention for 14 of the past 20 years.

She's spent nearly all of that time secluded in her family's dilapidated mansion on the shore on Rangoon's Inya Lake. She has been without the use of a telephone, or Internet access, and has only been allowed to see junta-approved visitors.

Despite that isolation, she remains easily the most popular figure in the country, and an icon to those who oppose the military junta that has ruled Myanmar for the past 48 years. "People, even if they have never seen her, they know her name," said human rights activist Naw Htoo Paw.

Ms. Suu Kyi was barred from running in last week's election because of her "criminal record." The NLD boycotted the vote, arguing that a free and fair election could not be held under the rules set by the junta, and was later forced to officially disband.

"She is the only one who can change the nation," said Naw San, head of the Students and Youth Congress of Burma. "If she walks to Shwedagon, tens of thousands of people will follow her."

With a report from the Canadian Press

Follow related authors and topics

Authors and topics you follow will be added to your personal news feed in Following.

Interact with The Globe