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YangonBuses

19 JUNE 2013 - YANGON, MYANMAR: A conductor waits for passengers at a Yangon bus stop. Many of buses are imported from Japan, which drives on the left side of the road. Bus owners in Myanmar have had to cut doors into the side of the bus because Myanmar drives on the right. Yangon buses are generally overcrowded and in poor repair but as the economy improves newer, but still used, Japanese and Korean buses are being imported. Hundreds of bus routes criss-cross Yangon, providing the cheapest way of getting around the city. Most fares are less than the equivalent of .20¢ US. PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ

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YangonBuses004.jpg
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© Jack Kurtz
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5760x3840 / 11.4MB
062113 Burma Bus Commuter Economy Mass Transit Myanmar Rangoon Traffic Yangon
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Myanmar / Burma (all)
19 JUNE 2013 - YANGON, MYANMAR:  A conductor waits for passengers at a Yangon bus stop. Many of buses are imported from Japan, which drives on the left side of the road. Bus owners in Myanmar have had to cut doors into the side of the bus because Myanmar drives on the right. Yangon buses are generally overcrowded and in poor repair but as the economy improves newer, but still used, Japanese and Korean buses are being imported. Hundreds of bus routes criss-cross Yangon, providing the cheapest way of getting around the city. Most fares are less than the equivalent of .20¢ US.  PHOTO BY JACK KURTZ
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Jack Kurtz, Photojournalist & Travel Photographer

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