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Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi delivers speech at ASEAN Business & Investment Summit
HAPPENING NOW: Myanmar's Aung San Suu Kyi delivers speech at ASEAN Business & Investment Summit www.cnn.ph
Aung San Suu Kyi pushes for women entrepreneurial empowerment; keeps mum on Rohingya
By Tricia Aquino, News5 | InterAksyon
| , 10:00 PM
Myanmar
State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi delivers her speech at the ASEAN
Business and Investment Summit. Photographed by Bernard Testa, News5 |
InterAksyon
MANILA
– There is a “somewhat reprehensible” Burmese saying, according to
Myanmar State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi, that goes, “You must treat
your son like a lord, and your husband like a god.”
“I don’t think I quite agree with that,” she said, delivering a
speech at the ASEAN Business and Investment Summit on Sunday at the
Solaire Resort and Casino in Parañaque City. “And I don’t think the
women here agree, either.”
Nevertheless, it is still tradition to look upon men as superior to
women in her Southeast Asian country. And throughout the region, she
said, “women are still missing out on opportunities in countless areas.”
She continued: “The social norm that equates women with unskilled
labor and perceives them as mere homemakers incapable of making
decisions is one of our biggest challenges.”
Her Excellency Aung San Suu Kyi delivers her speech at the ABIS 2017 launch of the AMEN program.
But, nowadays, more and more women are participating in Myanmar’s
transformation. At least 49 percent of young Burmese entrepreneurs are
women, Suu Kyi added.
“Traditionally
our women have always been at the forefront of business,” she said. “We
always depended on our women to make sure that our families were
economically secure.”
As the majority of women-led enterprises are small- and medium-sized,
they face challenges such as access to finance, markets, land,
information, and technology.
They have to cope with gender discrimination as well.
“To achieve positive change in women’s rights, it is important to
increase the number of girls enrolling primary and secondary school,
improve the participation of women in the labor force, ensure better
maternal health outcomes, provide most solid social protection measures,
and promote the role of women in decision-making,” Suu Kyi stated.
She reported that Myanmar developed a 10-year national strategic plan
to advance women, and that the country is committed to creating an
enabling environment for women so they can realize their potential.
She invited the rest of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations to do the same.
“Developing countries must strive to develop human capital. This can
be done through education and training to produce a qualified workforce
that can compete in the changing economic global environment,” the
Burmese leader said.
They must also think about whether they are developing people to
become better human beings rather than simply more empowered in material
terms.
“Because Myanmar, as a young democracy struggling with many, many
challenges, has become fully aware of the need for development of
peoples as human beings, not just as economic powerhouses,” Suu Kyi
said. “And our women, too, need to be empowered to become better human
beings as well as better economic players.”
But the Nobel Peace Prize winner was mum on the Burmese government’s
plans for the Rohingya ethnic refugees, 600,000 of whom have fled the
country since August, when the army cracked down on insurgents in what
the United Nations has described as ethnic cleansing.
She, instead, discussed the country’s progress in terms of “integrity, plus business”.
“We depend for our economic development the enhancement of integrity.
I think that’s a better way of … putting it than saying getting rid of
corruption,” Suu Kyi said.
She noted that some of those who previously did business in Myanmar
have said it was easier to do so then because they only had to know whom
to bribe. Now, they have to know how to do business “the right way”.
“For Myanmar, newly emerged from decades of economic and political
isolation, and amid the recent global economic slowdown, there are many
challenges. Yet, despite these, we remain committed to stay the course
to achieve inclusive and sustainable development together with all ASEAN
countries,” Suu Kyi said. “As a responsible member of ASEAN, Myanmar
will work together with all our ASEAN family members to become more
connected and integrated economically and socially.”
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