The letter from the Prime Minister of Canada, given to Suu Kyi, has come publicly
Canada's Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's letter to Myanmar leader Aung San Suu Kyi expressing her disappointment and anger over the barbaric repression on Rohingya
Earlier, in the early Rohingya crisis, the country's liberal Prime Minister Trudeau told Suu Kyi that she had deep concern over phone call. Then on September 18 he wrote a letter to Suu Kyi.
The Canadian government gave honorary citizenship to Suu Kyi. Pointing to that point, Trudeau said, "I would like to inform you with deep frustration, surprise and anger that other citizens of Canada have noticed that barbarous persecution is going on in Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar's Rakhine.
He writes, "I am deeply concerned about the situation they faced and the protection of all minority ethnic groups in Myanmar."
In Trudeo 2012, Suu Kyi also reminded the Nobel lecture. When Suu Kyi accepted the award after two decades of receiving the Nobel Peace Prize, she said in the speech, "When the Nobel Committee honored me with the Peace Prize, they also recognized that the oppressed and isolated people of Burma are also part of the world."
Suu Kyi also said in the speech that the people's right to get freedom from free speech and fear-free society. In his letter to Suu Kyi, Trudeau wrote, "Your moral statements are ridiculing the current situation of Rakhine."
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