BBC BBC 19 March 2012 | By Robert Reid In Mrauk U, goat herders and radish farmers still live and work amid the 700 historic temples. (Robert Reid) “Yo yo yo!” is the three-beat attention-getter touts across Southeast Asia use to get you to ride their taxi or buy their postcards. It comes in quick succession, lingers like a mosquito and usually gets what it seeks: a bit of your business. Related: Planning tips from Lonely Planet But in one of the most remote corners of Burma, it was the last thing I imagined I would hear. Burma (officially Myanmar) is the newest hotspot of Southeast Asia. Now that its military leaders have turned over the government to civilian hands (at least on paper) and the US has normalized its diplomatic relations, arrivals are expected to increase by 300% in 2012, reaching a total of one million tourists. This kite-shaped nation of rickshaws and ox carts remains, as Rudyar