The veteran democracy champion's National League for Democracy (NLD) party swept landmark November polls that look set to curtail the military's decades-long chokehold on the country.
But under Myanmar's complicated junta-era political charter, her party is not expected to take power until February -- and Suu Kyi herself is banned from becoming president.
"We have to build peace. Building peace is the first ever duty of a new government," she told supporters at the party's Yangon headquarters today, during a speech marking the country's Independence Day.
The 70-year-old opposition leader had remained somewhat tight-lipped on what her government's main objectives and who her main players will be, as delicate transition negotiations continue between the incumbent military-backed government and the her victorious party.
Myanmar is a patchwork of ethnic identities with over 130 officially-recognised minority groups, many with distinct languages and cultures.
Across vast swathes of these often remote regions, ethnic rebel groups have fought wars against the military for greater autonomy, many of them lasting for decades.
Myanmar's outgoing quasi-civilian, military-backed government recently inked ceasefires with a clutch of ethnic armed groups, with a landmark peace conference due to start next Tuesday.
But several major conflicts persist and some of the most significant insurgent outfits have yet to sign up to the deal.
Suu Kyi has said her party supports a federal future and has made ethnic affairs and peace a central pillar of her party manifesto for Myanmar, where ethnic minority groups have fought decades-long wars for greater autonomy
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