Aung San Suu Kyi, the opposition leader whose 2010 release from house arrest signalled the beginning of Myanmar's transition from decades of military rule, is scheduled to meet Park Geun-hye in Seoul today, who takes office next month as South Korea's first female president.
The meeting between two of the most prominent women in Asia spotlights a tragic coincidence in their family history: Suu Kyi's father, Gen Aung San, was killed by assassins in 1947 while Park's, President Park Chung-hee, was assassinated by his intelligence chief in 1979.
Park, who is 60, enjoys strong support among older South Koreans with memories of the rapid economic growth during her father's rule.
Suu Kyi's trajectory, however, has been one of a dissident, while Park has built a political career as a ruling party lawmaker owing much to her father, a dictator who took power in a 1961 coup and ruled South Korea with an iron fist until he was killed 18 years later.
"Park carries family baggage that sets her away from the image of the pro-democracy movement, while Suu Kyi stands on the other side as an icon of democracy," said Lee Shin-hwa, a professor of political studies at Korea University in Seoul.
Democracy has firmly taken root in South Korea since the death of Park's father and a peaceful transfer of power more than a decade later. Myanmar, with a reformist government in place but the military still in the background, is nurturing a fragile democracy.
The meeting between Suu Kyi and Park will be the latest in a series of high-profile exchanges between their countries, including reciprocal visits last year by South Korean President Lee Myung-bak and Myanmar's President Thein Sein, both heading delegations keen on bolstering economic cooperation.
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