Pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi welcomed on Friday U.S. engagement with Myanmar, saying she hoped it would set her long-isolated country on the road to democracy, according to Reuters. U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton held a final meeting with Suu Kyi as she wrapped up a landmark visit to Myanmar which saw the new civilian government pledge to forge ahead with political reforms and re-engage with the world community. Clinton and Suu Kyi - the Nobel laureate who has come to symbolise the pro-democracy aspirations of Myanmar's people - held a private dinner on Thursday and met again on Friday at Suu Kyi's lakeside home, effectively her prison until she was released in November last year after years in detention. "We are happy with the way in which the United States is engaging with us and it is through engagement that we hope to promote a process of democratisation," said Suu Kyi, adding that Clinton's visit was a "historical moment" for both countries. The two, arguably the world's most well-known women politicians, met for about an hour and a half then stood on a verandah, holding hands as they spoke to a crowd of reporters. Neither mentioned U.S. sanctions on Myanmar, imposed because of rights abuses and the suppression of democracy, but Clinton, in talks with the leaders of a new civilian government in the capital, Naypyitaw, on Thursday, held out the prospect of the end of sanctions provided there was real progress on reform. Both women spoke of the need to support Myanmar's development with Suu Kyi singling out "capacity building", particularly on education and healthcare. Suu Kyi said she welcomed more support for Myanmar including World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) assessment missions which she said would help draw up priorities. "We have to find out what our greatest needs are," she said. Clinton's trip follows a decision by U.S. President Barack Obama last month to open the door to expanded ties, saying he saw "flickers of progress" in a country until recently seen as a reclusive military dictatorship firmly aligned with China. Suu Kyi also called on the military-backed government to do more to ensure the rule of law, which she said would prevent the arrest of more political prisoners. "We need all those who are still in prison to be released and we need to ensure that no more are arrested," she said. She said she would work with the new government, the opposition and friendly countries including the United States and China for a better future for her country. "If we go forward together I'm confident there will be no turning back from the road to democracy. We are not on that road yet but we hope to get there as soon as possible with our friends," Suu Kyi said. Clinton's trip - the first by a senior U.S. official in more than 50 years - represents an opportunity for both Myanmar and the United States, and both appear eager to press ahead with rapprochement. Myanmar's new leadership hopes the United States will eventually see its way clear to ease or remove the sanctions, a step which could open the resource-rich but desperately poor country to more foreign trade and investment and help it catch up to booming neighbours such as Thailand and India. For Washington, improved ties with Myanmar could underscore Obama's determination to up U.S. engagement in Asia and balance China's fast-growing economic, military and political influence. Clinton praised Suu Kyi's "steadfast and clear" leadership adding that she say "some ground for encouragement" after her talks with government leaders in the capital, Naypyitaw, on Thursday. "You have been an inspiration," Clinton told Suu Kyi. "But I know that you feel you are standing for all the people of your country who deserve the same rights and freedom as people everywhere. We want to see this country take its rightful place in the world." Clinton was later due to meet representatives of ethnic minority groups, some of which have been locked in bloody conflict with the army for decades, as well as fledgling civil society organisations. She will aim to reassure them that the U.S. outreach to Myanmar's government does not mean it will ease pressure on human rights, political freedoms and rule of law in a country long a hallmark for authoritarian military rule. Both Clinton and Suu Kyi called for an end to the conflicts between the army and minority guerrillas. "All hostilities must cease within this country as soon as possible. We must rebuild ethnic harmony and peace and a union that is prosperous and stable," said Suu Kyi, the daughter of the country's assassinated independence leader, Aung San. Clinton, after her talks with President Thein Sein on Thursday, announced a package of modest steps to improve ties, including U.S. support for the IMF and World Bank assessment missions and expanded U.N. aid programmes. She also said the United States would consider reinstating a full ambassador in Myanmar and could eventually ease crippling sanctions, but underscored that these future steps would depend on further measurable progress in Myanmar's reform drive. U.S. officials said Clinton's visit was aimed at bolstering reformers in the government, but said it was clear that some powerful figures remained wary of reforms - throwing a question mark over whether the changes can be sustained. Suu Kyi's National League for Democracy will contest coming by-elections for parliament - seen as the next key test of the government's reform programme - and Suu Kyi herself has said she will stand for election, another sign that she believes the changes under way are real. Suu Kyi thanked Obama and praised the "careful and calibrated" way in which the United States was approaching Myanmar's leaders. "This will be the beginning of a new future for all of us provided we can maintin it and we hope to be able to do so," she said. Suu Kyi and Clinton embraced and were visibly moved by their encounter.