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The Africa-China Poverty Reduction and Development Conference
The Africa-China Poverty Reduction and Development Conference took
place on Monday and Tuesday this week in Addis Ababa. Co-hosted by
the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), the International
Poverty Reduction Center in China (IPRCC) and the Government of
Ethiopia, the conference brought together delegates from African
countries, China and emerging economies like Vietnam to explore
poverty reduction and development experiences, and to consider
‘development as transformation’ approaches to the reduction of
poverty, accelerating growth and achieving the MDGs. The key
objectives of the meeting included contributing new elements and
approaches towards finding breakthrough strategies for poverty
alleviation and accelerating growth in Africa. The themes included:
Development as Transformation, Towards a High Growth Africa;
Transformational Lessons, The Chinese Experience in Reducing
Poverty; A Food Secure Continent? Africa as the Next Agricultural
Power?; Enhancing Societal Capabilities and Social Cohesion; and
Emerging Economies, New Development Partnerships in A Globalizing
World.
Opening speeches were given by Helen Clark, the UNDP Administrator,
and Zheng Wenkai, Vice-Minister, the State Council Leading Group
Office of Poverty Alleviation and Development, the head of the
Chinese delegation. Zheng Wenkai said China was keen to support the
efforts of Africa to alleviate poverty and the sharing of China’s
experiences could provide a useful and additional window in China’s
growing co-operation with Africa. Helen Clark said developing
countries needed to put in place appropriate development policies to
alleviate poverty. They could draw valuable lessons from China on
how to beat poverty and achieve the MDGs.
Prime Minister Meles gave a keynote address in the opening session,
emphasizing that Ethiopia had put in place a successful strategy to
enable the public to fight against poverty. He said there were two
development alternatives. The first was increasing productivity and
making those who benefited pay higher taxes and so distribute the
benefits. The other was to make development fair overall, and this
was where Ethiopia was registering the results. Africa, he said,
could draw experiences from other areas, but the key to its
development must be based on its own policies. The continent had no
greater enemy than poverty. The biggest killer disease in Africa was
not malaria or AIDS, it was poverty. “It kills and maims millions
both directly and through its facilitative role for other killer
diseases.” The Prime Minister said Africans needed to learn more
from those who had succeeded in fighting poverty as China had,
particularly over the last three decades. According to the World
Bank well over 400 million people have been lifted out of poverty,
and of these three quarters are in China. It was therefore natural
to try to learn how the Chinese did it “with a view to refining our
own strategies to combat poverty” said the Prime Minister.
There was no disagreement among speakers or participants that
poverty reduction was long overdue. Many took the view that China’s
advances in this respect deserved recognition and should provide
useful lessons for Africa’s still fledging efforts. There was also
considerable agreement that there could be no single orthodox
solution to the problem. Africa should lean neither to the
Washington nor the Beijing consensus. Africa should learn from not
copy the approaches of others, but academic sand policy
practitioners alike commended the South-South dialogue and
cooperation.
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Deputy Prime Minister Hailemariam meets UNDP Administrator Helen
Clark
On Monday, Ato Hailemariam Desalegn, Deputy Prime Minister and
Minister of Foreign Affairs, met Ms. Helen Clark, the Chief
Administrator of UNDP, exchanging views on global, regional and
sub-regional issues, and in particular the current situation in the
Horn of Africa. Ms. Clark applauded the fast economic progress
Ethiopia has been making in recent years and emphasized the
importance of linking this to poverty reduction. She appreciated the
achievements of the government in expanding education and health
services. Indicating that the country was well in line to meet most
of the global MDG targets, she promised that UNDP will closely work
with the government of Ethiopia towards the realization of the
targets in the new Growth and Transformation Plan. On sub-regional
issues, Ms Clark recognized the pivotal role Ethiopia is playing to
help ensure peace and security in the Horn of Africa. She noted that
the restoration of peace in Somalia must be pursued in line with the
Djibouti Peace Process and the 4.5 Formula. On Sudan, she commended
Ethiopia’s efforts to bring the two parties together to ensure the
peaceful conduct of the January Referendum. She said the issue of
Abyie was becoming increasingly contentious and further stressed
that this must be resolved peacefully on the basis of the
Comprehensive Peace Agreement and the rulings of the International
Court of Justice.
Recognizing the long standing development cooperation between UNDP
and the Government of Ethiopia, Ato Hailemariam extended thanks for
UNDP’s support in the fight against poverty. He stressed that the
Government of Ethiopia was striving to ensure not only fast growth,
but also to make certain the benefits of this growth were shared by
all. He thanked UNDP for co-organizing the Africa-China Poverty
Reduction and Development Conference held this week. Ato Hailemariam
emphasized that Ethiopia was currently active in the efforts to free
Africa from poverty and destitution. He noted that the continent
needed policy independence and a legitimate share of global
resources. Ethiopia, he said, is working for the realization of
these through NEPAD and the global negotiations on climate. He
stressed that the absence of peace and security in Somalia
destabilized not only the sub-region, but had a much wider impact
through terrorism and piracy. There was still a very real need to
strengthen the TFG and the role of the UN in this regard was
particularly important. The Deputy Prime Minister noted that
Ethiopia had the longest boundary with Sudan and the issues of peace
and security there would have the greatest impact on Ethiopia. He
said Ethiopia had been careful to remain balanced and had the trust
of both parties, North and South. It would continue its efforts to
ensure the peaceful and successful conduct of the January
Referendum.
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A new Prime Minister to provide continuity for Somalia’s
transition period
The Somali transitional parliament has finally given a vote of
confidence to the new Prime Minister of the TFG, Mr. Mohamed
Abdullahi Mohamed. 297 MPs voted for him, 92 against. The AU
Commission Chairperson, Dr. Jean Ping, welcomed the endorsement of
the Prime Minister, and said that he hoped an efficient and
representative cabinet would be appointed very soon, allowing the
Transitional Federal Institutions to focus on the transitional tasks
ahead. The election of the new Prime Minister came after long debate
ostensibly over the procedural issue of whether the vote should done
openly or through a secret ballot, with the President supporting the
former, and the Speaker of the Parliament demanding the latter. The
Prime Minister will now have to establish his credibility to govern
and resolve the divisions within the TFG and the TFIs, providing it
with policies that bring its disparate elements together within the
framework of the Djibouti peace process, which IGAD and the
international community have endorsed as the fundamental basis for
progress in Somalia.
The first major task facing the new Prime Minister is the formation
of the new cabinet required by the constitution. It is expected that
the composition, as well as the effectiveness of the new cabinet,
should reflect popular support as well as be in line with the
Transitional Federal Charter. The new government needs to win the
confidence of the Transitional Federal Parliament and of the
international community in order to solicit support and to garner
diplomatic as well as the political support necessary to ensure the
stability of Somalia. The Prime Minister faces a daunting task to
create a functioning administration which will have to be carefully
balanced. The Prime Minister, who comes from Gedo region, has been
in the United States for the last thirty years.
At his swearing-in the Prime Minister asked for support and
assistance in his heavy duties, promising to protect the laws of the
country and pursue the common interest of the people and the nation.
President Sheikh Sharif said the Prime Minister was expected to
appoint a cabinet based on merit to complete the formidable tasks
ahead “in the short period left”. The end of the transitional
period comes in August next year. The President called on MPs to
support and work with the Prime Minister to help restore security,
improve humanitarian access, retake regions currently under
extremist control, strengthen and build on the federal system and
the constitution, and seek reconciliation. Perhaps an even more
major problem that certainly needs to be tackled urgently is
corruption which has become widespread. Similarly, resources need to
be directed to the right places, one of which is ensuring that
security forces get their pay. The provision of adequate funds for
the maintenance of the security forces remains a serious problem as
does their need for pay, medical and other expenses.
Prime Minister Mohamed is expected to move delicately in his efforts
to encourage reconciliation among Somali political forces.
Reconciliation is central to the Djibouti peace process, but
national reconciliation cannot be seen as a method by which
terrorist groups seek political pardon. It is rather a forum in
which the agreements concluded with the parties that are prepared
for peace, such as Ahlu Sunna wal Jama’a, are encouraged and
nurtured. National reconciliation remains necessary to secure the
political survival of the Somali state and to forge harmony among
the different political forces that have been waging
self-perpetuating conflict. It is only this which can bring about
some consensus in Somali politics. The Prime Minister’s appointment
was welcomed by Ahlu Sunna wal Jama’a which signed an agreement to
work with the TFG in March, but recently withdrew co-operation
claiming the TFG had failed to implement the agreement fully.
Meanwhile, according to a Ugandan military spokesman, a thousand
Somali troops who have been undergoing military training in Uganda
under European Union and Ugandan instruction, will finish their
training next month. They will be returning to Mogadishu. They will
be replaced by another thousand recruits for the Somali forces who
will be arriving for training shortly. According to the Ugandan
spokesman, by next month a total of at least three thousand Somali
troops will have been trained in Uganda and will have returned to
Mogadishu. In addition, Djibouti is currently training 600 Somali
police officers, and another 200 are going to be given training in
Kenya. Others will be trained in Rwanda and South Africa starting in
January. Trained police officers will take over the increasing areas
in which AMISOM and TFG forces have re-established security in
Mogadishu.
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President Isaias contradicts the Emir of Qatar on the
Eritrea/Djibouti agreement
President Isaias Afeworki has once again provided one of his
interview lectures, this time to a Qatari journalist. As usual, it
offers a perspective on President Isaias’ thinking on regional and
international issues, but the main focus of the interview revolves
around Eritrea’s relations with Djibouti and with his government’s
role in the conflict in Somalia. At times, he appears to be making a
considerable effort to be circumspect, though as usual somewhat
mendacious, in his views, elsewhere his position appears to be
distinctly at odds with others.
His position regarding the Qatari-mediated peace agreement between
Eritrea and Djibouti, for example, is far removed from those of all
the other parties in the deal including the Qatari mediators. Not
only does he deny the existence of any conflict between the two
countries, he also contradicts what the mediators believed was his
agreement to withdraw his forces from disputed territories. For
President Isaias the Djibouti conflict is a mere fabrication having
nothing to do with either Djibouti or Eritrea. The
‘misunderstanding’ was cooked up by others and the Djiboutian
government simply took the bait. “I have no forces to withdraw from
Djibouti”, the President claimed, and even suggested the question
should be rather directed towards the Qatari Prime Minister for
having insinuated that Eritrea had agreed to withdraw its forces
when in fact, according to President Isaias, it had never sent any
troops into Djibouti. According President Isaias: “HH the Prince
knows there is no withdrawal from the disputed area…there is no
disputed area.” Asked why in that case he agreed to Qatari mediation
if in fact there was no such dispute in the first place, the
President responded that he did it out of respect for the bold
gesture of the Qatari Emir, “a brother and a partner for us” who was
“the first human being, since the manufacturing of this
misunderstanding” to initiate a dialogue “with seriousness and
credibility to find a solution to the misunderstanding.” It does not
appear to him that by contradicting the terms of the very agreement
the Emir managed to get the two parties to sign, President Isaias is
making a direct criticism of the “credibility and seriousness” of
the whole mediation. Who fabricated this misunderstanding, this
problem? The president is more circumspect than usual on this
question, claiming that the ‘misunderstanding’ was blown out of
proportion only after the US State Department made a statement about
it. He said he hadn’t even been aware of the existence of such a
conflict until the Emir of Qatar had called him and broken the news
to him. It was a surprise, President Isaias lamented.
On Somalia, as usual, it is the whole world, not his government,
which is in the wrong. He does not recognize the TFG because it is
the puppet of external forces. He denies supporting extremists in
Somalia because, according to him, there are no extremists in
Somalia, only people who are fighting external intervention. No one
is spared from his scathing criticisms, not even the UN, which
President Isaias accuses of allowing itself to be used by the great
powers to promote their own agenda. None of the efforts to bring
about peace in Somalia are going to work President Isaias tells us.
The only solution, he emphatically tells his interviewer, is for the
world to leave Somalis alone. He does not, however, indicate if he
is also willing to leave them alone. On past record, probably not;
but then as he has made very clear, the ways of the world do not
apply to Eritrea or its leaders.
During the interview, the journalist complains that Information
Minister Ali Abdu kept signaling to him to wind up his interview
whenever the President appeared irritated or obviously upset about
his questions. At the end, President Isaias even apologized for “the
discomfort created by these intervention signals” which the
journalist referred to as “an embodiment of foreign intervention”.
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Ethiopia presents its initial report to the Committee
Against Torture
This week, Ethiopia presented its initial report under the
International Convention against Torture to which it is a party. The
report was presented during the ongoing 45th Session of the
Committee against Torture in Geneva, Switzerland. The Committee,
composed of ten independent experts, was established in order to
examine the initial and periodic reports of member states on
measures taken with the view to implementing the provisions of the
Convention. Ethiopia’s delegation included representatives from the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Ministry of Justice, the Federal
Police Commission, the Federal Prison Administration and the
Permanent Mission of Ethiopia to the United Nations in Geneva. The
delegation was led by Ambassador Fisseha Yimer, the Special Advisor
to the Foreign Minster. He also introduced Ethiopia’s report for the
committee’s consideration.
Ambassador Fisseha explained the background for the preparation of
the report in which stakeholders at federal and regional level had
vigorously participated. He noted the support and assistance of the
Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights. He explained the
constitutional and political framework for the implementation of
human rights. Ethiopia has emerged from a past in which the state
and its institutions were used to terrorize innocent citizens, so
the achievement of the objectives of the Convention is an urgent
task. This was why the government had carried out a comprehensive
trial and accountability process bringing to justice high officials
of the former government. Ambassador Fisseha’s introductory
statement also provided information about some of the specific
legislative and administrative measures the country has taken to
give full effect to the protection the Convention guarantees.
Members of the Committee acknowledged the measures taken at national
level to implement the convention. Questions were raised with
respect to the treatment of prisoners in custody, the situation of
human rights in certain regions, and the protection of women and
children from harmful traditional practices as well as Ethiopia’s
relationship with UN Special Procedures, the role and competence of
the national human rights commission, the enactment of protection
from torture in national legislation, and the accountability of
police and military for human rights violations. Members of the
delegation provided information on the various laws passed to
provide protection, particularly those designed to keep women and
children from harmful practices. The criminal law and criminal
procedure codes guarantee due process for people under detention and
on trial. The respective proclamations regulating federal
institutions such as the military, the police and prison
administration also provide norms and standards on treatment of
individuals by these institutions and their members. These
institutions also work with international organizations and NGOs in
order to improve conditions in police custody and detention centers.
A few specific questions required additional reflection and
information, and the delegation stressed its readiness to provide
the necessary information to the Committee in due course in writing.
The Committee expressed its satisfaction with Ethiopia’s engagement
and its willingness to consider Ethiopia’s further submissions. The
Committee’s concluding observations can be expected to be issued
shortly.
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The BBC apologizes to Sir Bob Geldof and Live Aid
The BBC yesterday issued an “unreserved” apology for broadcasting a
series of reports earlier this year, implying that millions of
pounds of aid funds raised by Band Aid and Live Aid in the 1980s to
fight famine in Ethiopia had been diverted to arms purchases by
opponents of the then military government. The allegations in
particular had claimed that aid had been diverted by the Tigray
Peoples Liberation Front to buy guns. The TPLF subsequently became
part of the Ethiopian Peoples Revolutionary Democratic Front which
overthrew the military regime in 1991 to take power in Ethiopia. The
original story was followed up by other BBC programs naming Sir Bob
Geldof’s Live Aid and Band Aid charities as the source of diverted
funds. An internal BBC investigation has now found that the story
and subsequent summaries of the claims were unfair, and that these
false accusations had been repeated, and exaggerated, by other
reports around the world. Indeed, the London Times reported the next
day that a BBC program had alleged that “95 per cent of aid money
donated to help victims of the 1985 Ethiopian famine were siphoned
off.”
Sir Bob Geldof, the founder of Live Aid, said the whole episode had
been an unusual lapse in standards by the BBC. The program had
failed to inform listeners of the unreliability of the witness who
made the most dramatic claims, that 95% of aid was misappropriated.
“He was a man of no credibility” said Sir Bob “but his claim, thanks
to the BBC, was picked up all over the world as evidence that aid
doesn’t work.” But, of course, it does, and, as he pointed out,
thousands of lives are saved from AIDS, TB and malaria every day,
the numbers of children dying from measles has fallen by 90%, and
more than two million children a year now survive their firth
birthday, and all because of aid. Sir Bob Geldof added: “The BBC’s
misleading and unfair coverage on this story has done unknown damage
to ordinary people’s willingness to donate their hard-earned cash…”.
He said the public needed to be “confident that the money it donates
in good faith gets to the people it is intended for….”. He therefore
hoped the BBC’s apologies would “begin to repair some of the
appalling damage done.”
Sir Bob Geldof deserved his apology, but as a number of commentators
immediately pointed out the BBC made no effort to apologize to
others affected by the BBC’s original report. It isn’t just Band Aid
that is owed an apology but the British Government, other donors,
many other charities, and the international public, and, we might
add, Ethiopia and the Ethiopian Government. The main criticism of
the program, apart from the slur on Sir Bob Geldof, is that it gave
almost everyone who heard it the strong impression that it was
reporting credible allegations that up to 95% of the amounts of
famine relief and aid given to Ethiopia in the 1980s was diverted to
buy guns. Yet, as a former UK Ambassador to Ethiopia, Sir Brian
Barder, noted the efforts of governments, NGOs, Ethiopians and other
relief workers, supported by the generosity of private individuals
around the world “was outstandingly successful” in saving millions
of Ethiopians. “It was one of the most effective and uncorrupt
operations in the annals of disaster relief.”
The original allegations, predictably perhaps, were also picked up
by Ethiopian opposition groups, trying to equate the BBC allegations
with recent Human Rights Watch’s claims of diversion of humanitarian
aid for political purposes in Ethiopia, the alleged link being the
fact that Prime Minister Meles was, of course, a leading member of
the TPLF in the 1980s. In fact, as we have noted previously, Human
Rights Watch allegations, like those of the BBC, have been
convincingly repudiated. HRW first made these claims in March 2010
“A hundred ways of putting pressure”, apparently intending to try
and influence the election in May. Then, following the EPRDF’s
convincing win, in another report last month HRW claimed large-scale
diversion of humanitarian aid for political aims. Even prior to
this, the Donor Assistance Group (DAG), which issued a response
disagreeing with the report’s conclusions, had carried out an
independent investigation which found no evidence of widespread or
systematic distortion of aid delivery in Ethiopia. Similarly, a US
fact-finding mission late last year in southern Ethiopia found “no
evidence that food aid is being denied to supporters of the
opposition.” USAID’s Country Director, Thomas Staal, was quoted by
VOA as saying that “to us, the important thing is to make sure the
programs are well managed, closely monitored with strict
accountability systems, and you’re building institutions that can
make sure programs are meeting the goals, targets and beneficiaries
intended.” A World Bank team analyzed data on aid distortion from
the PSN Progam and found no widespread pattern of distortion. A
number of embassies and other NGOs in Ethiopia have also responded
dismissively to HRW’s claims.
HRW’s responses to these and criticisms of its methodology, its aims
and intentions, continues to be highly disingenuous. It has, as
usual, dismissed all criticisms, merely claiming, without producing
any evidence, that “privately” some members of NGOs or diplomats in
Addis Ababa support its allegations. Underlining her own political
thinking, HRW’s Senior Researcher on the Horn of Africa in
Washington, Leslie Lefkow, said that as the EPRDF had increased its
membership to between four and five million people between 2005 and
2010, she did not think “it is an exaggeration to say the party has
essentially infiltrated every layer of Ethiopian society.” The use
of the word “infiltrate” rather than say “is represented in” is
something of a give-away, suggesting a political agenda rather than
a genuine commitment to human rights. HRW, having failed to
influence the results of the election in May, now appears to be
trying to limit, even bring an end to humanitarian aid to
Ethiopia.
We might, in conclusion, emphasize that the Government of Ethiopia
has repeatedly made it clear that it has always investigated and
responded appropriately to any credible reports of abuse brought to
its attention by HRW or any other organization, including donor
agencies. It will continue to do so. However, HRW clearly needs to
be reminded that allegations need to be specific and detailed as
well as credible, and to be based upon identifiable, reliable and
accurate sources. All too often, HRW’s allegations, as we have
pointed out before, are simply too vague and wild to investigate.
Unfortunately, as US author, Mark Twain noted “a lie will fly around
the whole world while the truth is getting its boots on”. Not for
the first time, these regrettable efforts by the BBC and HRW
unfortunately threaten to prove the point.
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Core
Principles of Ethiopia's Foreign Policy: Ethio-German relations
Ethiopia and Germany have a history of longstanding diplomatic
relations which can be traced back to 1905. Both countries signed a
treaty of friendship in March 1905 intended to enhance bilateral
relations in the diplomatic and economic fields. This was followed
by the Emperor Menilik's grant of land for a German Diplomatic
Mission in Addis Ababa in 1907. The embassy is still located there.
The same year Ethiopia was provided Embassy premises in Berlin. The
centenary of the establishment of diplomatic relations between the
two countries was celebrated in 2005. Indeed, more than a hundred
years of modern diplomatic contact cannot be considered brief, but
even so people-to-people contacts between the two countries go back
rather further, more than 500 years in fact to a time when a German
prelate, Johannes Potkens, and an Ethiopian monk, Thomas Woldesamuel,
met. The famous German scholar, Hibo Ludolf, and an Ethiopian monk,
Abba Gregorious, also cooperated to produce the first grammar and
dictionary of the Amharic language in the seventeenth century.
Ethio-German relations have remained excellent to this day. There
have been a number of exchanges of high-level visits on various
occasions. Emperor Haile Selassie made a state visit to Germany in
1954, and also visited the country in 1966 and 1967. German Federal
President Luebke paid a state visit to Ethiopia in 1964. Other
Ethiopian visits to Germany have included Prime Minister Meles, most
recently in 2007; Foreign Minister Seyoum on three occasions, 2003,
2005 and 2009, and President Girma Woldegiorgis two years ago.
Chancellor Schroeder, President Kohler, and Chancellor Angela
Merkel, in 2007, have also visited Ethiopia in recent year. These
visits are a clear manifestation of the mutual understanding and
strong bonds of friendship that have existed between the two
countries for the last century and more.
Germany has made it clear it views Ethiopia as one of the more
important priority partners for economic cooperation. The 1964
economic partnership agreement laid a solid foundation for the
development cooperation that currently exists between Ethiopia and
Germany. In line with these commitments, the Government of Germany
has made available a sum of 115 million Euros for the on-going
2008-2011 development program in Ethiopia. This involves wide
ranging areas of cooperation, but the Ethiopian Government has given
a special degree of priority to the Engineering Capacity Building
Program (ECBP) which is funded by the German government and
spearheaded by German experts. This program is now fully operative
with full support from the Ethiopian Government and extensive
participation of the private sector. For the future, Ethiopia looks
forward to even more dynamic and active economic engagement with
Germany in tune with the government's new five year Growth and
Transformation Plan.
In the field of trade Germany has long remained the biggest market
for Ethiopian coffee with 30% of Ethiopia’s coffee destined for
German markets. Total trade reached 3.6 billion birr last year,
significantly up from the level of 2.29 billion birr five years
earlier. The balance remains in Germany’s favor with Ethiopian
exports amounting to 1.45 billion birr last year and imports from
Germany reaching 2.17 billion birr. Ethiopia has begun to diversify
its export items to try and sell more non-traditional Ethiopian
products. Another dynamic and promising area of cooperation is the
investment sector. Currently, there are some 160 investment projects
in Ethiopia of interest to German investors with a total value of
close to 11 billion Birr. Of these, 33 projects are operational
while the others are at various implementation and
pre-implementation stages.
Ethiopia, of course, attaches great importance in its foreign policy
to the Horn of Africa, and Ethiopia and Germany share common desires
for the peace and security of the region. As a central and active
member of the European Union, and a current non-permanent member of
the Security Council, Germany's active engagement in the region,
including its support for the training of Somali police officers in
Ethiopia, gives a welcome and added impetus to the ongoing efforts
by IGAD and other stake holders to bring about peace and security in
Somalia and the Sudan.
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