Pubdate: Sun, 5 Oct 1997 Source: Kyodo News Service FUKUOKA, Oct. 4 (Kyodo) A Japanese man working as a United Nations volunteer in Myanmar has started collecting donations to set up a boxing gym for drug addicts in the capital of Yangon. Shiro Mizuki, 28, is hoping to collect 5 million yen to begin building as early as next year a boxing gym in Yangon where he can teach boxing to people trying to recover from drug addiction. Mizuki started teaching boxing in January to drug addicts in Yangon where as many as 200,000 people are estimated to be addicts. An amateur boxer in his high school and college days, Mizuki became involved in the volunteer work after becoming acquainted with a staff member of the U.N. International Drug Control Program during a business trip to Yangon last year. Mizuki now teaches boxing twice a week at a public hospital to about 20 drug addicts whose ages range from their teens to their 30s. Facilities in the hospital ward are sparse, with no ring and only a sandbag and gloves. Having witnessed the return to the hospital of some former patients who vowed to keep away from drugs, Mizuki said he felt the need for a proper gym where people can practice on a permanent basis after leaving the hospital. ''The foremost aim is to keep fit. I hope that by building up a healthy body and heart, people will be able to break away from drugs that only provide temporary pleasure,'' he said. Mizuki's campaign for donations in Japan started in June. He is currently in Yangon but is scheduled to return soon to his home in Fukuoka Prefecture, southwestern Japan to resume activities until the target amount is reached.