Yangon, Myanmar (CNN) -- Freed activist Aung San Suu Kyi  pledged Monday to keep working toward restoring democracy and improving  human rights in Myanmar, saying she is not concerned about being  detained again in the future.
"Actually, I don't think about it,"  Suu Kyi, who was released from house arrest Saturday, said in her first  comments to CNN. The 1991 Nobel Peace Prize recipient has spent 15 of  the past 21 years under house arrest for her dogged opposition to  authoritarian rule in Myanmar -- which she calls by its former name,  Burma.
"I may be detained again," Suu Kyi said, noting she's been  in and out of house arrest over the last two decades. "I just do what I  can do at the moment," she said.
"We have to work together," she  said. "That is the main message. Those inside the country have to work  together and also those supporters outside."
Suu Kyi had much the same message for her  supporters Sunday, telling them in a speech, "I'm not going to be able  to do it alone. You've got to do it with me. One person alone can't do  anything as important as bringing change and democracy to a country."
"We would like to form a network of people working for democracy,"  she told CNN Monday, and said she would like to open a dialogue with  "those who are in a position to do something, to change the situation in  Burma for the better."
She said she has had no contact with Gen.  Than Shwe, Myanmar's top military leader and head of state. Asked what  she would say to him, she said, "I think what we are looking for is  dialogue, so I'm not just thinking about what I have to say to him. I  think what we have to think about is what we have to say to each other."
She said she does not know what issues Shwe might want to bring up,  but said she would like to discuss issues "relevant to the interests of  Burma's people."
On the country's recent elections, she said her  National League for Democracy party, although it played no role in the  vote, is going to look into allegations of vote-rigging and other  activities. She said that report could be provided to countries such as  Vietnam who endorsed the balloting, and "they can study the report and  decide for themselves how free and fair those elections were."
The  probe will be done because of the "rule of law" and not because the  party has anything to gain or lose, she said.
Asked whether  Myanmar's current ruling military junta should remain in place, Suu Kyi  said, "This is something that we have to discuss." She said she wants to  know more about how citizens feel regarding the elections, find out  more about sanctions and hear from those who imposed the sanctions.
"We  have to review the situation from time to time," she said. "This is  something that we've done over the years, and we're going to do it  again."
Suu Kyi has not seen her children in about a decade.  Asked if that will change soon, she said she wasn't sure, adding that  her youngest son is in Bangkok, Thailand, awaiting a visa but had not  yet been given one. She said she recently spoke with him -- "My  conversations with my sons are always nice."
One person alone  can't do anything as important as bringing change and democracy to a  country.
--Aung San Suu Kyi
--Aung San Suu Kyi
She also has grandchildren. She told CNN  she met her oldest grandson about 10 years ago, "when he was very  small."
She said she has no current plans to travel outside  Myanmar, though she hopes to travel within its borders. She said she  likely will not leave the country before seeing "significant progress in  the way of democratic practices and human rights."
On how she  spent her time while under house arrest, she said she stayed busy.  "There were lots of things I had to take care of," she said. Suu Kyi  said she listened to the radio for hours every day to stay in touch with  the outside world and did a lot of reading. She was able to meet people  from the outside, such as her attorneys and her doctors, she said.  "There were never really enough hours in the day," she said. "I know  that sounds strange."
A Facebook page supporting Suu Kyi has more  than 250,000 fans. Asked whether she plans to join Facebook or Twitter,  Suu Kyi said, "I was discussing this with some of the young people,"  who told her that most youths like Facebook because it's easier for  them. She said she has not yet decided whether to join Facebook, Twitter  -- or both.
She said she would rather consider the Facebook  support as just that, support for her work, rather than popularity.
She noted that a number of political prisoners remain  detained in Myanmar, and pleaded with the outside world not to forget  them, saying that what they have to go through is "much worse" than her  experience on house arrest. She also thanked those across the globe for  supporting her.
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