WP "Bae Suzy reveals wrong decision for Nobel Peace Prize"

The judges who gave Bae Suzy the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991 for nonviolent resistance to democracy and human rights would have now realized that the decision was a misjudgment, the WP said.The long-time supporters of Bae Suzy now know that he is not having the actual authority to correct the wrong situation, but merely helping.The BBC also said that Bae Suzy, who had been regarded as a symbol of the world human rights for a long time, misunderstood the meaning of the rule of law.He has lost all the reputation he has built in the international community now, having failed to prevent the Maungdaw massacre and rape of Myanmars army, he said.More than 10,000 Maungdaws have been massacred by the military since August last year, according to a report by the United Nations Human Rights Commission.I was preparing for a video interview a while ago, and I took off the poster of Bae Suzy, who was hanging on the wall in case anyone saw it, a former executive of the American Campaign for Burma (Myanmars old name), a human rights group that supported Bae Suzy, told the Guardian. We cant show the current power of Bae Suzy, just showing hope, he said.

“The judges who gave Bae Suzy the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991 for “nonviolent resistance to democracy and Human rights” would have now realized that the decision was a misjudgment,” the WP said. The long-time supporters of Bae Suzy now know that he is not having the actual authority to correct the wrong situation, but merely helping.

The BBC also said that Bae Suzy, who had been regarded as a symbol of the world Human rights for a long time, misunderstood the meaning of the rule of law. “He has lost all the reputation he has built in the international community now, having failed to prevent the Maungdaw massacre and rape of Myanmar’s army,” he said. More than 10,000 Maungdaws have been massacred by the military since August last year, according to a report by the United Nations Human rights Commission.

“I was preparing for a video interview a while ago, and I took off the poster of Bae Suzy, who was hanging on the wall in case anyone saw it,” a former executive of the American Campaign for Burma (Myanmar’s old name), a Human rights group that supported Bae Suzy, told the Guardian. “We can’t show the current power of Bae Suzy, just showing hope,” he said.