The Sentinel-Record

Exhausted Suu Kyi falls ill during news conference

- CATHERINE GASCHKA AND FRANK JORDANS

BERN, Switzerlan­d — A rock star welcome greeted Aung San Suu Kyi as she embarked on her first trip to Europe in 24 years. But after a whirlwind of standing ovations, speeches and receptions, it all became too much, and she fell ill Thursday during a news conference in Switzerlan­d.

The 66- year- old Nobel Peace Prize laureate became sick shortly after saying how exhausted she was after her long trip from Asia to Europe, which brought her to Geneva late Wednesday night. It was not known how her apparent exhaustion would affect the rest of a tightly- packed schedule, which includes delivering her Nobel Peace Prize acceptance speech in Oslo on Saturday, 21 years after winning the award.

Suu Kyi looked pale as she took questions Thursday evening alongside Foreign Minister Didier Burkhalter in the Swiss capital of Bern. After a few minutes, she pressed a finger to her lips and motioned to an aide who rushed to her side with a bag. She then bent over and threw up before being escorted out of the room by officials.

A spokesman for the Swiss Foreign Ministry said Suu Kyi recovered enough to briefly attend a reception with government officials later but then retired to her room.

“She’s just a bit tired,” spokesman Jean- Marc Crevoisier told The Associated Press. “I would be, too, after the long day she’s had.”

Earlier, the woman who has become an icon for the democracy movement had blamed age and lack of travel for her tiredness.

“Having stayed in one place for so long, I found the plane journey out to the West extremely exhausting and a little bit disorienti­ng because I couldn’t adjust to the new time as quickly as I might have 24 years ago,” Suu Kyi told reporters. “It may, of course, have something to do with age. It may have to do with lack of practice.”

The United Nations in Geneva was the first stop of her two- week European tour. Her appearance at a U. N. labor conference — an unlikely venue for glitz and glamor — had starryeyed functionar­ies reaching for their camera phones to snap a picture as Suu Kyi smiled and shook hands with well- wishers.

“You fill this room with the light of your spirit,” said Juan Somavia, the ILO’s director general.

The evening before, as Suu Kyi arrived at her hotel shortly before midnight after a long flight, spontaneou­s applause erupted in the lobby as the staff recognized their special guest.

Suu Kyi, who endured 15 years of house arrest and once feared permanent exile if she ever left Myanmar, has become the country’s most electric ambassador.

During this trip, Suu Kyi is expected to lay out how her country has changed and what still needs to be done before it can be called a proper democracy. She also had planned to address both houses of Britain’s parliament, receive an honorary doctorate from Oxford, attend a U2 concert in Dublin, and deliver in Oslo the acceptance speech for the Nobel Peace Prize that she won in 1991.

 ??  ?? NOBEL LAUREATE: Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi attends a news conference during the annual meeting of the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on ( ILO) Thursday in Geneva, Switzerlan­d. Suu Kyi said that investment in her country should...
NOBEL LAUREATE: Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi attends a news conference during the annual meeting of the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on ( ILO) Thursday in Geneva, Switzerlan­d. Suu Kyi said that investment in her country should...

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