I would agree with what your MPs saw on the ground during the elections, certainly in central Burma, where the people of Burman ethnicity, in Rangoon and in Mandalay and surrounding areas, are feeling the change. This is where you can get Suu Kyi T-shirts. This is where you can get international newspapers now. There was Internet access before the changes happened, but apparently the Internet is much faster now and less censored. You can now get BBC and things like that. So changes have happened in the central parts.
When I say that the Burmese people have yet to feel the change, I'm talking about the 15% who are ethnic minorities, and maybe also people in the Burman areas who don't live in urban areas, who are still out in the villages. For them, life is going on; they're still growing their rice, and they haven't seen much difference.