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| Daw Su in Parliament | 
NAYPYIDAW — Myanmar pro-democracy  leader Aung San Suu Kyi was sworn in as a member of parliament  Wednesday, opening a new chapter in the Nobel laureate's near  quarter-century struggle against authoritarian rule.
The 66-year-old, in the capital  Naypyidaw for the ceremony, stood to read the brief oath in unison with  33 other members of her National League for Democracy party elected to  the lower house in April, an AFP reporter said.
The oath hands Daw Aung Sun Su Kyi public  office for the first time and marks a transformation in the fortunes of  the opposition leader, who was held under house arrest for much of the  last 20 years but is now central to the nation's tentative transition to  democracy.
She had initially baulked at taking the oath, specifically a sentence pledging to "safeguard" the army-created constitution.
But on Monday she backed down  after the head of the nominally civilian government President Thein Sein  refused to offer concessions, explaining it was the "desire of the  people" to see her party in office after breakthrough April 1  by-elections.
But the wildly popular daughter of  assassinated independence hero Aung San also faces the difficulty of  managing the expectations of a nation impatient for change and the hopes  of Burmese who see her as a sole beacon for democratic freedom.
It is unclear how rapidly she  can deliver on her ambitious campaign promises, including the overhaul  of Myanmar’s army-drafted constitution, in a legislature dominated by  former members of the military junta who ruled for nearly half a century  before ceding to a quasi-civilian government last year.
“Only time will tell,” she  replied when asked by a Reuters reporter of the day’s significance, as  she waded through a chaotic throng of reporters on her way to the  chamber where she took the oath in a shortened 40-minute session.
Later, she told reporters: “I have  always been cautiously optimistic about developments. In politics, you  also have to be cautiously optimistic.”
Ms Suu Kyi’s entry into  parliament comes a month after her party’s landslide victory in a  by-election and two days after backing down in a stand-off over the  wording of an oath to protect the constitution sworn by all new members  of parliament.
The parliamentary session was to  have ended on Monday but was extended in part to allow Ms Suu Kyi and  fellow members of the National League for Democracy (NLD) to take their  seats.
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Entering  the chamber, she at first sat down on her own, near the block reserved  for serving military men who have a quarter of the seats under the  constitution, and seemed relaxed as other lawmakers greeted her.
She then lined up with  colleagues to take the oath, including a pledge to uphold a constitution  her party wants to change because it gives the military a leading  political role.
Asked if she felt awkward working with  the military, she replied, “Not at all, I have tremendous goodwill  towards the military. It doesn’t in any way bother me to sit with them.”
Her comments reflect the  dramatic scale of change in the former Myanmar, given the military’s past  treatment of Ms Suu Kyi, who was first detained by the army in 1989, and  then spent 15 of the next 21 years in detention until her release from  house arrest in November 2010.
Many lawmakers hope Ms Suu Kyi’s  parliamentary debut will be a catalyst for further reform by the  government of President Thein Sein, a former general who has freed  hundreds of political prisoners, legalised trade unions and protests,  and started a dialogue with  ethnic minority rebels.
“Parliament will be stronger  because of her good relationship with the international community,” said  Khin Maung Yi, a lawmaker from the National Democratic Force party. “We  parliamentarians have wanted her in the legislature for a long time ...  Many laws have to be changed and amended.”
Speaking to reporters after Wednesday's ceremony the veteran dissident said: "I believe I can serve the interests of the people more than before".
She was then whisked away by car to Naypyidaw airport to return to Yangon.



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