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Myanmar
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Myanmar’s junta says everything’s back to normal. Yangon clubbers don’t believe it’s true

Despite the lifting of curfew five years after the military coup, party-goers still wait until dawn to sneak home

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People sleep on a sofa in a nightclub in Yangon while others dance to loud music on May 16 Photo:  AFP
Agence France-Presse
In a blaring nightclub in wartime Myanmar, partied-out revellers doze until dawn by the dance floor, wary of journeying home despite the end of a post-coup curfew.

Lasers streak the smoke-filled air and music is cranked up to 150 decibels, according to one DJ – as loud as a jet engine at take-off – but the weekend clubbers slumbering on sofas dotted around the warehouse-sized Yangon venue do not stir.

“That became a habit, they’re used to it,” said one 29-year-old veteran of the capital’s elite party scene who, like other interviewees, requested anonymity for security reasons.

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The frenzied but furtive social scene contradicts the message from Myanmar authorities that the country is back to normal.

People dance in a nightclub in Yangon in the early hours of May 16. Photo: AFP
People dance in a nightclub in Yangon in the early hours of May 16. Photo: AFP

Five years after a military coup, they point out that they have held elections, installed a new government and ended Yangon’s lingering 1am to 3am curfew.

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