缅甸

Behind Burma's closed doors

I am the only woman in a covered stadium on the outskirts of Rangoon watching a kickboxing fight – aside, that is, from the girl who announces each round in a figure-hugging turquoise longyi. The crowd is lively – at a guess, 2,000 Burmese – who, like me, are sweating under the stadium lights.

I have come to the stadium thanks to Max Horsley, a British travel specialist who has been living in Rangoon since 2005. We are accompanied by Horsley's kickboxing instructor, a young champion.

To one side is a section marked VVIP. Behind the guard sits a single man surrounded by empty seats. I am told he is an official associated with Burma's ruling military junta, who have had pro-democracy leader Aung San Suu Kyi under house arrest since May 2003. The official looks my way. I try my luck and motion to take a photograph. He nods, smiles and leans back in his seat; for all the world he looks like any other man out on a Sunday afternoon to watch his favourite sport.

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