
Aung San Suu Kyi (R) talks with NLD supporters during arrives at her Nation League for Democracy (NLD) party headquarters14 May 1999 in Yangon, Myanmar. A defiant Aung San Suu Kyi said her democratic opposition was stronger than ever but admitted that intense pressure from Myanmar's military junta had exposed internal rifts in the party.
e enjte, 14 maj 2009
1999 with a nun
e hënë, 30 shtator 2002
2002?

Aung San Suu kyi, bruised on her left arm claimed to be caused by Myanmar security forces, recuperates in bed at her Yangon home in an undated photograph taken by supporters following one of her recent stand-offs with the country's junta. She has made four failed attempts in the last two months to visit provincial supporters, being blocked by the military just outside Yangon each time.
e hënë, 6 maj 2002
photo in 2002

democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi smiles at a question during a press conference after being freed from 19 months under house arrest 06 May 2002, making a triumphant return to her party's headquarters in Yangon where she declared her release was unconditional.
Suu Kyi, who truns 60 on June 19 alone and under house arrest, has spent nearly a decade in detention since taking up her pro-democracy cause in 1988.
More than 300 jubilant National League for Democracy (NLD) members let out a great roar as her car approached the building, and in the crush it took several minutes for her to be able to alight from the vehicle. The charismatic 56-year-old Nobel peace laureate told reporters her release from house arrest was unconditional and that the military junta would allow her to travel wherever she wishes.
e premte, 14 maj 1999
e hënë, 3 shkurt 1997
photo dated 03 February, 1997

This file photo dated 03 February, 1997 shows journalists reaching to grab a list presented to them by pro-democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi (C) showing figures of students and National League for Democracy (NLD) members arrested over the past month in Yangon. Myanmar's junta has silenced Aung San Suu Kyi by keeping her under house arrest, but her confinement has only heightened her stature as a symbol of the nation's struggle against tyranny. She has spent most of the past 18 years under house arrest in a rambling, lakeside home after leading her National League for Democracy to a landslide victory in elections in 1990.
e enjte, 23 maj 1996
Photo dated 23 May 1996

Photo dated 23 May 1996 shows Myanmar pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi addressing a press conference under a flag of her National League for Democracy (NLD) in Yangon. The former Nobel Peace Prize winner and her brother Aung San Oo failed to appear, 19 July 2001 at an important ceremony to mark the 1947 assassination of their father General Aung San.
e shtunë, 30 shtator 1995
e mërkurë, 19 korrik 1995
1995 july

This picture taken 19 July, 1995 shows Burmese democratic opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi laying a bouquet of flowers on the tomb of her father and assassinated Burmese liberation hero, Aung San, on Martyr's Day in Yangon.
e premte, 14 korrik 1995
14 July 1995

Aung San Suu Kyi (C) addresses 14 July 1995 hundreds of anxious Burmese supporters from the main gate of her family compound in Rangoon.
e enjte, 1 qershor 1989

In this undated picture believed to be taken late 1989 or early 1990 democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi walks inside her house on new University Road. Aung San Suu Kyi turned 61 on 19 June 2006, alone and under house arrest in the military-ruled state that has ignored calls to free one of the world's best known political prisoners.





