Suu Kyi offers hope to Myanmar workers in Thailand
Myanmar workers hold portraits of Myanmar opposition leader Aung
San Suu Kyi as they gather to hear her speech in Samut Sakhon, Thailand
on Wednesday, May 30, 2012. Kicking off her first trip abroad in nearly
a quarter-century, Suu Kyi offered encouragement Wednesday to
impoverished migrants whose flight to neighboring Thailand is emblematic
of the devastation wrought on her homeland by decades of misrule.
(AP
Photo/Sakchai Lalit)
Downtrodden but hopeful migrants from Myanmar crowded the streets
for a look at opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who said she will do
all she can to reverse decades of economic ruin and make it possible for
them to go home.
In the town of Mahachai,
home to Thailand's largest population of Burmese migrants, thousands
crowded around her Wednesday and chanted: "Long Live Mother Suu!"
"I
had only seen her on TV and in newspapers," said Saw Hla Tun, who left
Myanmar's Karen state seven years ago and earns a meager wage carrying
heavy salt sacks on his back. "I couldn't hold back my tears when I saw
her."
Khin Than Nu, who works at a Thai canning factory, said she dreams of her home in Myanmar's Mon state.
"We
left our parents in Burma, and all my brothers and sisters work here to
support our parents," she said. Using a Burmese honorific for Suu Kyi,
she added, "I hope Daw Suu will help develop our country, and bring jobs
so we can go home."
Suu
Kyi arrived in Thailand on Tuesday night on a trip that shows just how
much life has changed in her homeland. The Nobel Peace Prize winner
lived 15 of the last 24 years under house arrest and dared not leave
during the intermittent periods of freedom because she feared the
then-ruling military junta would not allow her to return. Now an elected
member of Parliament, she will speak this week at the World Economic
Forum on East Asia.
She'll
return to Myanmar briefly before heading to Europe for a five-country
tour in mid-June. She'll address the British Parliament, formally accept
her 1991 Nobel in Oslo, Norway, and be the guest of honor at a Dublin
tribute concert organized by U2's Bono and others.
In Mahachai, southwest of
Bangkok, Suu Kyi offered encouragement to the exuberant crowd, many of
whom held signs that read, "We want to go home."
"Don't feel down, or weak. History is always changing," she said.
"Today, I will make you one promise: I will try my best for you."
After
speaking to the crowd, Suu Kyi met with migrant workers who told her
they are mistreated by employers but don't know their rights and have no
legal means to settle disputes.
Fixing
a battered economy is one of the most crucial challenges facing Myanmar
as it begins opening up in the wake of 49 years of military governance
that ended only last year.
Thailand
hosts around 2.5 million impoverished Burmese who have fled here to
work low-skilled jobs as domestic servants or in manual labor industries
like fisheries and the garment sector.
Andy
Hall, a migrant expert and researcher at the Institute for Population
and Social Research at Thailand's Mahidol University, said the Myanmar
migrants - up to a million of them lacking work permits - make up
between 5 and 10 percent of the Thai work force, contributing as much as
7 percent of the nation's GDP.
Many
are exploited and paid reduced wages. Some have been trafficked; some
have had their passports confiscated by employers. Hall said they were
nevertheless "the lifeblood of a lot of the Myanmar economy, sending
home money to support families who don't have enough money to eat."
"They
have no voice, they can never speak up or stand up," Hall said. "So for
Aung San Suu Kyi to visit is like a dream come true, someone who
finally may be able to bring attention to their suffering."
---
Associated Press writer Yadana Htun contributed to this report.
