This week, The New York Times  covered Aung San Suu Kyi's visit to Thailand -- the first foreign trip  for Myanmar(Burma)'s opposition leader in 25 years. Many people who have dealt  with Suu Kyi and her political entourage over the years say that the Times report, which described a striking lack of organization in the upper  ranks of the National League for Democracy (NLD), was spot-on. 
Last week, Suu Kyi's staff  turned down a request for a meeting from Paul Collier, one of the  world's top economists. Their excuse: The Lady was busy. "Perhaps her  staffers don't know who Collier is," one source in the opposition told  me. "The Myanmar opposition movement has missed the chance to benefit  from a great mind." Meanwhile, government newspapers covered have  reported that ministers and presidential advisors gave Collier plenty of  time.
Prominent experts from the Myanmar exile community, many of them with valuable experience acquired  in their years abroad, say that the NLD is ignoring them even while the  government is actively soliciting their services. "There is no proper  mechanism set up by Suu Kyi for Myanmar researchers to play a  contributing role to the opposition movement," says a Myanmar scholar  who graduated from a top U.S. university and visited Yangon a few  months ago. 
The NLD is also having problems  with reporters. Lately there have been increasing tensions between the  NLD and local journalists. In early May, a member of Suu Kyi's security  staff manhandled a local photojournalist who tried to take pictures of  the Lady. Local reporters say that the bodyguards abused them, saying:  "You media people are doing this for money. We don't make a f---ing  penny. We face jail time because we're doing politics." 
Many NLD members suffered under  the previous regime. But Suu Kyi, who holds to a rigorous moral code,  rightly tends to dismiss those who bring this up. She once famously  said: "If you choose to do something, then you shouldn't say it's a  sacrifice, because nobody forced you to do it." Moreover, since many  journalists (and activists-turned-journalists) were also imprisoned by  the military regime for their political and professional work, the  self-righteousness and arrogance of the NLD members are likely to  backfire. 
Local  reporters have complained in the past few weeks that the NLD no longer  issues open invitations to the media to cover important political  events, such as Suu Kyi's recent meeting with India's Prime Minister  Manmohan Singh. 
Maung Wuntha, a well-respected  veteran journalist and a former leading member of the NLD in 1988, told  me that the NLD staffers who are close to Suu Kyi need to learn how to  work in a more media-friendly manner: "Many of them tend to see  journalists as careerists who do not have any principles and commitment  to the interests of the country. This perception is a serious problem.  Unless they realize that journalists are doing a public service, we  aren't going to see any fundamental improvement in relations between  politicians and reporters." 
Another public criticism of Suu  Kyi and her staff has come from an unexpected source: staunch NLD  supporters outside of Myanmar. Eight major Myanmar exile organizations --  including such dedicated and well-connected groups such as the Network  for Democracy and Development, the Women's League of Myanmar, and the  Human Rights Education Institute of Myanmar in Thailand - asked for some  face time with Aung San Suu Kyi during her visit in Bangkok, but to no  avail. For perhaps the first time since 1988, many prominent exiled  activists came together to express their frustration in the Myanmar-language media. "We feel sad," said Khin Ohmar, NDD chairwoman,  told The Irrawaddy, a leading Myanmar-language magazine. "We have worked  tirelessly for our country since 1988. We can't go home, so while our  leader's visiting us here, we all would like to meet her and exchange  views and experiences." 
You  can find signs of frustration not only on the Thai-Myanmar border, but  also in the capitals of the United States and Europe. Several lobbyists  who relentlessly advocated on behalf of Suu Kyi and her  "principle-centered policy" of economic sanctions for decades are now  disoriented by the Lady's apparent lack of coordination and inability to  delegate. A dedicated Suu Kyi advocate told me he's been trying to get  in touch with the NLD's information department for months to arrange a  conversation between Suu Kyi and the president of a newly democratizing  Asian country, but his correspondence has gone unanswered. 
Of  course, it's not fair to blame Suu Kyi for all these problems, given  that the party's organization is still weak. Most party activists  (including herself) have spent long periods in detention - perhaps the  most important among many legitimate excuses for the problem. By now,  though, it's high time for Aung San Suu Kyi and her party to step back,  practice self-criticism, and think aloud about whether they have burned  too many bridges too quickly in this transitional phase. Perhaps what  Suu Kyi needs is not just an entourage, but a full-blown chief of staff  with a proper team that is capable of strategic planning and management  and can support her in the decision-making process. Moral courage and  clarity are hugely important in politics, but you also need the capacity  to cultivate your base and craft sound policies if you really want to  get things done.

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