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EU suspends Myanmar sanctions

The move follows similar decisions by the United States and Australia, and is aimed at rewarding the country’s efforts to move forward with democratic reforms following decades of military rule.

Myanmar: Suu Kyi to boycott parliament over oath row

The tension over the oath is the first sign of contention between the opposition and the reformist government of President Thein Sein.

Aung San Suu Kyi to visit Norway and Britain

Aung San Suu Kyi will be leaving Myanmar for the first time in more than two decades.

Chatter: Aung San Suu Kyi to visit Europe

Aung San Suu Kyi will leave Myanmar for the first time in 24 years. Suu Kyi, who is expected to visit the UK and Norway in June, spent years under house arrest and previously refused to leave Myanmar for fear the military junta would bar her from returning home.
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Graphic. (Antler Agency/GlobalPost)
Aung San Suu Kyi will leave Myanmar for the first time in 24 years. Suu Kyi, who is expected to visit the UK and Norway in June, spent years under house arrest and previously refused to leave Myanmar for fear the ruling military junta would bar her from returning home.
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US lifts Myanmar sanctions to boost NGO projects

The decision follows Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s announcement on April 4 that Washington plans to relax sanctions banning senior Myanmar officials from travelling to the US and lift restrictions on the export of US financial services to the country.

I got the visa!

It's not just Myanmar that has changed. I have too.
Myanmar elections analysis 2012 03 29 01Enlarge
A Burmese monk and his son feed the seagulls along the Yangon river ahead of the parliamentary elections March 29, 2012, Myanmar. (Paula Bronstein/Getty Images)

I got the visa! I am going back to Bur — I mean Myanmar — in May.

I lived in Yangon for a year in 2003-2004 and haven’t been back since. The last time I was there Aung San Suu Kyi was under house arrest. We couldn’t write, talk or think about her. Instead, we spoke…quietly… about The Lady. I remember going to a birthday party of a little girl and seeing a framed photo of The Lady on the wall. The presence of the photo impressed me, but it also made me nervous. A couple years later, the authorities arrested that little girl’s father and sent him to prison.

Two weeks ago, The Lady won a seat in parliament. Talking about her is no longer brave; it’s the norm.

But it’s not just Burma that has changed. I have too. In the eight years since I lived in Yangon, I have married, separated, divorced and gotten engaged again. I have gone to grad school. I have lived in Thailand, South Africa and India. I have become an aunt. I have joined Facebook and Twitter and (don’t judge) Pinterest. I have gone from being an aspiring writer with big ideas who hated being edited to being a professional journalist who knows she has much to learn. In many ways, I left Burma a kid and am returning an adult.

But at the heart of it, I’m still me and Burma is still Myanmar, and I can’t wait to go back. I’m excited to see old friends and meet their new babies and eat tealeaf salad and speak broken Burmese.

It will be hard to go back without my ex-husband, for whom Yangon is his home and yet hasn’t been able to return. Everything will remind me of him. Drinking beer at ABC Country Pub and listening to a live band sing Burmese lyrics to Eye of the Tiger. Riding in rundown old taxis that have broken windows and dirty seats. Hanging out with friends who were his friends first.

But that too is a big reason I must return. When we divorced, I felt I lost not just a husband and dear friend, but a country and culture I felt passionately about. In May, when I arrive in this land that is no longer “forgotten,” I will create new memories there. I will reclaim Bur — I mean Myanmar — as my own.

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UK's Cameron calls for easing sanctions on Myanmar

Call by Cameron welcomes political changes in Myanmar and looks to end decades of isolation.

Myanmar: God, golfing and guerrilla war

LAIZA — Stray dogs scurry across the fairway. The greens have seen better days, and a civil war rages just 10 miles away. But here in the conflict-torn hills of northern Myanmar, the Laiza Golf Club (est. 2006) remains open for business.

Aung San Suu Kyi to meet Myanmar President Thein Sein

The National League for Democracy spokesman, Nyan Win, said Aung San Suu Kyi and Thein Sein would likely discuss democratization and peace talks with the ethnic rebels in Myanmar, also known as Burma.

Burma: Official date set for Suu Kyi's entry to parliament

However, 80% of parliament is still controlled by the military-backed Union Solidarity and Development Party.
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