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MYANMAR/
RTR38ZS9 
October 10, 2012 
A man sleeps inside a car before taking it to a junkyard to exchange it for a new import license in Yangon's... 
Yangon, Myanmar 
A man sleeps inside a car before taking it to a junkyard to exchange it for a new import license in Yangon's... 
A man sleeps inside a car before taking it to a junkyard to exchange it for a new import license in Yangon's suburbs September 19, 2012. Years of isolation and trade-crippling sanctions have left Myanmar's streets with one of the world's oldest vehicle fleets, dominated by wheezing Japanese cars from the 1980s or older. As Myanmar opens up, the most immediate physical changes are on its streets, as new cars begin plying roads long dominated by rattletrap buses and rusting taxis. Barely changed since the British colonial era in the early 20th century, some of the decades-old buses and trains are starting to be retired. REUTERS/Damir Sagolj (MYANMAR - Tags: TRANSPORT SOCIETY) 
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