Twenty-seven-year-old Thinzar Shunlei Yi is one of several youth activists in the Southeast Asian nation pushing her government to better deliver for its people.
Myanmar transitioned from military rule to quasi-democracy in 2015. But while visiting Australia this week, Thinzar Shunlei Yi told SBS News her country has a very long way to go.
"I want [Myanmar to] embrace humanity, democracy and human rights," she told SBS News in an exclusive interview.
"Having water cannons trying to disperse the crowd … I felt like we were being treated like the biggest criminals ever.
"We're just young women trying to raise our voices for peace in Myanmar."
She said growing up, democracy activist Aung San Suu Kyi was her idol.
"I am who I am right now because of what she was saying about human rights and democracy," she said.
But that changed when Aung San Suu Kyi became State Counsellor, or Myanmar's de-facto leader, after the country's historic 2015 elections.
Since then, the Noble Peace Prize winner has been accused by rights groups of being complicit in military-led civil conflicts, including a crackdown on the Rohingya people.
"[The new government] didn't meet our expectations and that disappoints us," Thinzar Shunlei Yi said.
She said there are also many challenges of being a young woman speaking out against the government.
"As a young female activist, I get a lot of backlash and discrimination," she said.
Her 10-day visit to Australia coincided with this week's raid of the ABC by the Australian Federal Police.
"[This] not a new thing to me, it happens all the time back in my country … but in Australia," she said.
Asked if she has plans to run in Myanmar's 2020 election, she said, "I have a dream, of course, to be in the politics but right now I feel I don't want to be locked up in the system, that system is a failed system".
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