Tag Archives: caribbean

Protests Rock Northern Haiti City Ahead of President’s Funeral

CAP-HAITIEN, Haiti, July 21 (Reuters) – Unrest roiled the northern Haitian city of Cap-Haitien on Wednesday as demonstrators set up roadblocks in protest against the assassination earlier this month of President Jovenel Moise, whose body will be laid to rest there on Friday.

National police chiefs arriving in Cap-Haitien to help oversee Moise’s funeral were met by protests from the slain president’s supporters, who hold police responsible for the killing at his residence on July 7.

Government officials say Moise was murdered by a team of mostly Colombian mercenaries, but many questions remain unanswered, including why the president’s security forces did not do more to protect him.

At least one person lay dead in the streets of Cap-Haitien following the disturbances, which took place just as Moise’s widow Martine attended her first public event since returning from Miami at the weekend.

Dressed in black, wearing a face mask and with her heavily plastered right arm in a sling, Martine Moise sat in silence beneath a portrait of her husband as a priest delivered a eulogy to the dead statesman.

Martine, who was injured in the attack on her husband, spoke no words, but shed tears as the commemoration ended to the strains of a woman singing “Ave Maria”.

Reporting by Herbert Villarraga in Cap-Haitien, Haiti; Additional reporting by Dave Graham and Andre Paultre in Port-au-Prince; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore

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Haiti Assassination Suspects Wait in Limbo, Family Members Left In Dark

By David Shortell, Natalie Gallón and Stefano Pozzebon, CNN

(CNN) Two weeks after the assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moise, dozens of men arrested by local police remain in detention facing no formal charges and with limited access to attorneys.

The legal limbo, made more uncertain by a “a state of siege” invoked after the July 7 killing, has left human rights groups concerned about a lack of due process for the detainees, and relatives of the men, who hail from Haiti, Colombia, and the Unites States, desperate for details.

In Colombia, families of the men, who make up the bulk of the 26 detained suspects, have banded together to raise funds for lawyers.

‘Something terrible happened’: A radio call with one of the men accused in presidential assassination plot

A Colombian “honorary consul” to Haiti was named in recent weeks, but senior officials from Bogota have delayed a visit to the country at the request of the government.

And the only information gleaned so far by the family of Christian Emmanuel Sanon, the Haitian-American doctor who police say orchestrated the assassination, is that the 63-year-old is still in good health after officials from the US State Department visited him earlier this month.

“It doesn’t look like he’s been beaten or anything, it looks like he’s in good health, but they’ve only seen him that one time,” said Steven Bross, a friend of Sanon who has spoken with his family in Florida.

Due process rights for prisoners have long been weak in Haiti, where years of autocratic leadership have eroded the checks on power more familiar in developed countries.

As authorities there urgently seek an explanation for the shocking and embarrassing assassination, the capabilities of the Haitian police have grown even greater.

Vague provisions under the emergency order, which is set to expire this week, “seem to justify anything done in the context of the investigation,” said Brian Concannon, a board member at the Institute for Justice and Democracy in Haiti.

 

‘Something terrible happened’: A radio call with one of the men accused in presidential assassination plot

None of the men have made public appearances before a judge.

It was not apparent that any had been provided legal counsel, either. Under Haitian law, prisoners can receive a court-appointed attorney, although they typically aren’t made available until late in a case, Concannon said.

Asked repeatedly whether the suspects have access to legal representation, Haiti National Police spokeswoman Marie Michele Vernier said only that the men were in contact with their respective embassies.

Abuse behind bars is common in Haiti — even under regular circumstances — although no allegations of physical mistreatment of the men have emerged to date.

“Interrogatory torture is routine in run of the mill cases, so I would expect there’s an extremely high likelihood of that in this case, where the police are under a lot of pressure,” Concannon said.

Twenty-six men have been detained since the assassination, Vernier told CNN Wednesday, including 18 Colombians, five Haitians and three US citizens.

Their alleged roles vary, but most are not believed to be high-level architects of the plot. A number of Haitian police have also been detained in a separate administrative investigation, according to Haitian authorities.

Haitian police say Sanon, who had mounted an above-board foray into politics in recent months, hired the Colombians and other men as “mercenaries” in an attempt to seize power in the country.

The Colombians are believed to have operated in two groups: a larger group who thought they were hired as private security for Sanon, and a smaller group who knew of a “criminal” objective and were aware the bigger operation was a cover-up, Colombian President Ivan Duque said last week.

The two other Haitian-Americans in custody are said to have been hired as translators.

Citing privacy concerns, a US State Department official declined to confirm any consular visits with the US citizens in custody but said that the agency generally works to provide assistance to Americans detained overseas.

In Florida, Sanon’s family believes he is being set up as a scapegoat, according to Bross, the family friend.

The doctor had recently announced plans to seek the Haitian presidency in a future government and had hired the Colombians and other men from a Florida firm as security in Haiti, according to a company that arranged funding for the effort.

Sanon’s family believes the need for security was legitimate, Bross said. Sanon had publicly criticized the country’s now assassinated president and he believed he would be unsafe in the country, where political violence is rampant, Bross said.

Sanon has denied all knowledge of the operation to investigators and insisted on his innocence, CNN has reported.

On Sunday, consular officials from Colombia are ​expected to travel to Port-au-Prince after the Haitian government requested they delay their visit until the assassinated president’s funeral, which is Friday.

The officials will meet with the detainees and help them find local legal representation, the country’s foreign minister said.

Several relatives of the Colombians who spoke to CNN said they are still in the dark about the men’s condition.

“We’re desperate. Every day for me is hell,” the wife of one of the detained men said over a text message.

The woman, who requested anonymity because the case is sensitive, has petitioned the Red Cross to visit her husband, according to a letter she shared with CNN.

“Our family is unaware of his physical, psychological and legal state. We’re suffering and need to have some type of telephone or virtual communication with the help of the Red Cross because his young children and family are emotionally affected by this sad situation,” the woman wrote.

Earlier Wednesday, families of the men met with an official from the Foreign Ministry’s office but left with no new details on their relatives’ statuses.

“As of this moment, we know absolutely nothing about how they’re doing and how they’re being treated. We’re still in the same suffering,” Milena Africano, whose husband is among the detained, said after the meeting.

The official did tell the families that they could give packages to the consular mission to deliver to the men.

On the list of items allowed to be sent: two white shirts, a pair of sandals, and a small supply of toiletries.

CNN’s Natalie Gallon reported from Port-au-Prince, Stefano Pozzebon from Bogota and David Shortell from Miami.

Reporting contributed by CNN’s Caitlin Hu, Matt Rivers and Etant Dupain in Port-au-Prince.

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YouTube Removes Bolsonaro Videos for Covid Misinformation

YouTube says it has removed videos posted by Brazilian President Jair Bolsonaro, because they spread misinformation about coronavirus.

The tech giant said its decision was not based on ideology or politics, but on its content policies.

Since the start of the pandemic, the president has spoken out against lockdowns, masks and vaccinations.

His office has not commented on YouTube’s decision, which affects 15 videos, local media say.

His channel features weekly national addresses, and conversations with ministers about various issues – some of which are live-streamed.

According to news outlet O Globo, one video shows Eduardo Pazuello, Brazil’s former health minister, comparing coronavirus with Aids.

“Post-HIV pandemic, HIV continues to exist. There are still some who are contaminated, most are treated, and life goes on,” said Mr Pazuello.

In another video of a CNN broadcast, a Brazilian doctor recommended hydroxychloroquine, a malaria drug, and the anti-parasitic drug ivermectin as treatments against Covid-19.

So far their efficacy in treating the virus is unproven.

YouTube said it does not allow content on its platform that promotes either substance as an effective treatment. It also said its rules forbid videos that say masks do not help to prevent the spread of the virus.

This is not the first time that major digital platforms have taken President Bolsonaro’s videos down. Last year Twitter and Facebook removed videos of him railing against social distancing measures, and claiming that high case numbers would make Brazil immune to Covid.

During the pandemic Brazil has grappled with one of the world’s largest and deadliest outbreaks of coronavirus, and the president has faced mounting criticism for his handling of the crisis.

In April, Brazil’s congress launched an official inquiry into the Bolsonaro government’s response to the pandemic.

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WHO Chief: New Variants May Drive World Back to Square One

THE world faces going “back to square one” in the fight against Covid unless countries work together to stop new deadly variants emerging, the chief of the World Health Organisation warned today.

Amid the staggering rise of global cases that have reached nearly 200 million, Tedros Adhanom reiterated his stance on a combined effort adding that “none of us are safe until all of us are safe.”

The World Health Organisation has warned that 'nobody is safe' is vaccines aren't shared

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The World Health Organisation has warned that ‘nobody is safe’ is vaccines aren’t sharedCredit: Alamy
The announcement came days before the start of the Tokyo Olympics on Friday

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The announcement came days before the start of the Tokyo Olympics on FridayCredit: Reuters

Speaking ahead of the start of the delayed Tokyo Olympics – which is taking place among the backdrop of a covid decimated Japan – WHO chief Tedros said the pandemic would already be under control by now if rich countries had shared more vaccines with poorer nations.

But instead, he suggested that we are all vulnerable to killer strains emerging in virus hot spots as it starts to spread around the globe.

He said: “Here’s the thing about an inferno: if you hose only one part of it, the rest will keep burning.

“And the embers of one fire can easily spark another even more ferocious blaze somewhere else.”

As the UK this week eased almost all social restrictions, countries both to the east were standing on the edge of national disasters amid a deadly surge in cases fuelled by the emergence of more aggressive variants and a lack of vaccines.

On Saturday, Indonesia, a country now experiencing one of its worst outbreaks since the pandemic began reported 51,952 cases and 1,092 deaths.

Shocking images collecting the bodies of people who were unable to access treatment.

Meanwhile, in nearby In Malaysia, shipping containers were sent to hospitals because their morgues are so overwhelmed.

In Thailand, field hospitals were being built at the capital’s two airports, while in Myanmar, social media has been inundated with desperate pleas for oxygen.

It means that while Europe is hoping mass inoculation campaigns will help slow the effects of the new variants, south-east Asia’s vaccination rates remain extremely low.

In Myanmar, less than 4% of the population has received one vaccine dose, compared to more than 2/3rds in England who have both doses.

Brazil and India, two other countries hit hardest by the pandemic, have had 17% and 6% of their population fully vaccinated.

People protest in Covid ravaged Indonesia as WHO Chief Tedros Adhanom blasted richer countries for not supplying vital resources

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People protest in Covid ravaged Indonesia as WHO Chief Tedros Adhanom blasted richer countries for not supplying vital resourcesCredit: AFP
Civilians were captured queuing in Brazil where the vaccine rate remains considerably low

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Civilians were captured queuing in Brazil where the vaccine rate remains considerably lowCredit: Reuters

In his statement, Tedros said the global discrepancy in Covid vaccines was not only a “moral outrage” but also self-defeating as it will make the pandemic drag on longer, bringing “social and economic turmoil”.

He said: “The more transmission, the more variants will emerge with the potential to be even more dangerous than the Delta variant that is causing such devastation now.

“And the more variants, the higher the likelihood that one of them will evade vaccines and take us all back to square one.”

The Health Organisation had previously suggested that the prominent Delta variant had been detected among 85 countries, warning that the “fitter and faster” mutation from India would become the dominant strain.

Even in the UK, a country that has handed out a single dose to more than 46 million people, there has been a spike in cases with the variant said to account for more than 90% of cases.

WHO’s chief scientist Soumya Swaminathan confirmed last month that the Delta Covid strain is becoming the dominant variant of the disease worldwide and it could get even worse.

“The Delta variant is well on its way to becoming the dominant variant globally because of its increased transmissibility,” Swaminathan told a news conference.

Experts added that the Delta variant spreads more easily because of mutations that make it better at latching onto cells in our bodies.

Tedros Adhanom also warned about the effects of variants - including the Delta variant which originated in India

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Tedros Adhanom also warned about the effects of variants – including the Delta variant which originated in IndiaCredit: Rex

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Dr Andrea Ammon, director of the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control, warned the mutant is already spreading rapidly in Europe.

“Based on available scientific evidence, the Delta variant is more transmissible than other circulating variants.

“We estimate that by the end of August it will represent 90 per cent of all SARS-CoV-2 viruses circulating in the European Union,” he added.

Dr Ammon also said: “It is very likely that the Delta variant will circulate extensively during the summer, particularly among younger individuals that are not targeted for vaccination.

“This could cause a risk for the more vulnerable individuals to be infected and experience severe illness and death if they are not fully vaccinated.

“The good news is that having received two doses of any of the currently available vaccines provides high protection against this variant and its consequences.”

And today, the UK was handed another body blow as it was warned that a “vaccine dodging,” Labada variant could be the next to threaten the country’s new found freedom.

Although there is currently differing opinions on the severity of the Lambda strain, the WHO confirmed that is now considered as the seventh “variant of interest.”

 

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Howell charged for Murder

 

Basseterre, St. Kitts, July 21, 2021 (RSCNPF): On July 20, 2021, the Police charged 26-year-old Patrick Howell Jr. of Cane Garden for the murder of Travis Clarke and for the offences of Robbery and Larceny which were all committed on July 16, 2021. He was also charged for the offence of Escaping Lawful Custody which occurred on July 18, 2021.  Howell has been remanded to Her Majesty’s Prison.

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Bezos Donates $100 million Each to CNN Contributor Van Jones and Chef Jose Andres

New York (CNN Business)Jeff Bezos, the Amazon (AMZN) founder and world’s wealthiest man, said Tuesday after flying to the edge of space that he planned to award $100 million each to CNN contributor Van Jones and chef José Andrés.

Bezos said that Jones and Andres were free to do “what they want” with the money.
“They can give it all to their own charity,” Bezos said at a press conference after his trip to space. “Or they can share the wealth. It is up to them.”
The money, Bezos said, was tied to a “surprise” philanthropic initiative he wanted to announce called the Courage and Civility Award.
The award aims to honor those who have “demonstrated courage” and tried to be a unifier in a divisive world, Bezos added.
“We need unifiers and not vilifiers,” Bezos said. “We need people who argue hard and act hard for what they believe. But they do that always with civility and never ad hominem attacks. Unfortunately, we live in a world where this is too often not the case. But we do have role models.”
Jones, accepting the award, said that “sometimes dreams come true.”
“You bet on me and I appreciate it,” Jones told Bezos, later adding that it was money for him to “give to others who have a similar spirit.”
Andrés, who has poured his efforts into feeding those in need around the world, said that the award itself “cannot feed the world on its own.”
“But,” Andrés added, “this is a start of a new chapter for us.”
Anderson Cooper, who was anchoring CNN’s special coverage on Tuesday, said on-air after Bezos announced the award that it was “quite a surprise.”
“None of us knew anything about it,” Cooper said.
The philanthropic initiative from Bezos comes as he and fellow billionaires such as Richard Branson, the Virgin Galactic investor, face criticism for spending their wealth on space tourism. Bezos has previously been criticized for not contributing more to philanthropy, but has donated billions of dollars in recent years to causes including climate change and food banks.
Critics have said that the world’s richest people should work to improve the conditions for people here on Earth, instead of flying off into space. Bezos and supporters of the space programs, however, have countered that both are possible.
“Well, I say they’re largely right. We have to do both,” he said in an interview with CNN Monday. “You know, we have lots of problems here and now on Earth and we need to work on those, and we always need to look to the future. We’ve always done that as a species, as a civilization. We have to do both.”

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Biden Pressured on Haitian Immigrants to US

President Joe Biden speaks during. News conference with German Chancellor Angela Merkel in the East Room of the White House in Washington, Thursday, July 15, 2021. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh)

Several Haitian American legislators and groups in New York have called on the Joe Biden administration to “create an easier pathway” for Haitians seeking political asylum in the United States.

In their letter, the elected officials, including New York State Assemblymember Rodneyse Bichotte Hermelyn, chair of the Brooklyn Democratic Party, urged the administration to create this “easier pathway” by lifting the refugee admission ceiling, temporarily halting the deportation of Haitian migrants and providing Haitians with humanitarian aid in the form of food assistance and additional COVID-19 vaccine doses.

“There is a crisis in Haiti that demands our immediate attention as Americans, and begs the continued action of your leadership,” according to the letter that was also signed by New York State Assembly members Michaelle Solages and Kimberly Jean-Pierre; New York City Council Member Farah N. Louis; and Democratic Party nominees for New York City Council Rita Joseph and Chi Osse.

“Haitian-Americans served en masse as health care workers and frontline essential workers during the COVID-19 pandemic. Now is the time to give back to our Haitian-American community. Now is the time to protect those who protected us, by ensuring that the relatives of Haitian-Americans living abroad, receive the humanitarian protections necessary to save their lives and livelihoods.

“The United States is a nation built by immigrants in pursuit of freedom, and the promise of a better life. Today, Americans have an opportunity to help the people of Haiti escape persecution,” the letter stated.

“We ask that you employ the full powers of your office to raise the refugee admission ceiling from where it currently stands to help accommodate Haitian applicants; temporarily halt the deportation of Haitian migrants from the US; and supply the people of Haiti with humanitarian aid in the form of food assistance and additional COVID-19 doses.”

Meanwhile, a group of over 200 current and former Haitian American elected officials has also written to the Biden administration, requesting an “urgent” meeting to discuss US policy toward Haiti in the wake of the July 7 assassination of Haitian President Jovenel Moïse.

The Washington-based National Haitian-American Elected Officials Network (NHAEON), considered the largest network of Haitian-American elected and appointed officials in the US, has written to US Secretary of State Antony Blinken.

“We have been working to build a relationship with the Biden administration vis-a-vis its foreign policy towards Haiti,” states the letter, signed by NHAEON Chairperson Alix Desulme, a council member in North Miami, Florida.

“While we are pleased with President Biden’s extension of TPS (Temporary Protected Status), we grow weary and frustrated with the lack of communication of the ongoing instability in Haiti,” the letter states, adding “NHAEON members are the elected representatives closest to the Haitian community and have a keen understanding of the dynamics in Haiti and its impact on our communities.

“We are ready to work with you to add value to the trajectory of US foreign policy towards Haiti To this end, we are requesting immediate scheduling of a briefing with your office on the aforementioned issues.”

NHAEON said its members represent millions of constituents across the United States but primarily in Florida, New York and New Jersey.

It said its members are “dedicated to supporting domestic policies, legislation and issues affecting Haitians living in the United States”.

CMC

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WHO Leader Says Virus Risk Inevitable at Tokyo Olympics

TOKYO (AP) — The Tokyo Olympics should not be judged by the tally of COVID-19 cases that arise because eliminating risk is impossible, the head of the World Health Organization told sports officials Wednesday as events began in Japan.

How infections are handled is what matters most, WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a speech to an International Olympic Committee meeting.

“The mark of success is making sure that any cases are identified, isolated, traced and cared for as quickly as possible and onward transmission is interrupted,” he said.

The number of Games-linked COVID-19 cases in Japan this month was 79 on Wednesday, with more international athletes testing positive at home and unable to travel

“The mark of success in the coming fortnight is not zero cases,” Tedros said, noting the athletes who already tested positive in Japan, including at the athletes village in Tokyo Bay, where most of the 11,000 competitors will stay.

Teammates classed as close contacts of infected athletes can continue training and preparing for events under a regime of isolation and extra monitoring.

Health experts in Japan have warned of the Olympics becoming a “super-spreader” event bringing tens of thousands of athletes, officials and workers during a local state of emergency.

“There is no zero risk in life,” said Tedros, who began his keynote speech minutes after the first softball game began in Fukushima, and added Japan was “giving courage to the whole world.”

The WHO leader also had a more critical message and a challenge for leaders of richer countries about sharing vaccines more fairly in the world.

“The pandemic is a test and the world is failing,” Tedros said, predicting more than 100,000 deaths from COVID-19 worldwide before the Olympic flame goes out in Tokyo on Aug. 8.

It was a “horrifying injustice,” he said, that 75% of the vaccine shots delivered globally so far were in only 10 countries.

Tedros warned anyone who believed the pandemic was over because it was under control in their part of the world lived in “a fool’s paradise.”

The world needs to produce 11 billion doses next year and the WHO wanted governments to help reach a target of vaccinating 70% of people in every country by the middle of next year.

“The pandemic will end when the world chooses to end it,” Tedros said. “It is in our hands.”

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T&T Joins Jamaica with Most Caribbean Cases

Trinidad and Tobago became the second Caribbean Community (CARICOM) country to register more than 1,000 COVID-19 related deaths since the onset of the pandemic.

Jamaica is the other CARICOM country registering more the milestone with the latest figures indicating that the island had now 1,158 deaths as a result of the virus.

Jamaica also has 51,282 confirmed cases of the virus, of which 3,046 are active. The country also recorded 46,724 recoveries.

The latest bulletin issued by the Ministry of Health in Trinidad and Tobago noted that two deaths over the last 24 hours had pushed the total to 1,000, and that there are 5,691 active cases.

There are 301 patients in hospitals, 146 people in state quarantine facilities, and 5,150 people in home self-isolation.

The authorities here said that the number of people tested in public and private facilities is 255,325, with 262,976 people having received their first vaccine dose, while 174,992 people had received their second dose.

In Suriname, six deaths in the past 24 hours, have pushed the death toll from COVID-19 to 620 since March last year with this month accounting for 98 deaths.

The authorities said that 123 new cases were reported on Tuesday, pushing the total number of positives in the country to 24,435.

There are 114 people in the hospitals and 29 patients in the Intensive Care Units. A total of 20,581 citizens have been healed, including 180 in the past 24 hours. There are also 955 infected people in isolation.

In Guyana, the death of an 82-year-old woman on Tuesday, pushed the death toll to 514 since March last year.

The Ministry of Public Health said that the woman from Region 4 (Demerara-Mahaica), died while receiving care at a medical facility.

It said that there were 62 new recorded cases of the virus pushing the confirmed cases to 21,668 with 19, with 993 having recovered.

The ministry said that 12 persons are in the ICU, while 1,144 are in isolation with 1,052 isolating at home.

St. Lucia recorded three new cases of the virus from a batch of 147 samples taken during the period July 15-19.

The Ministry of Health and Wellness said confirmation had also been received that 11 individuals diagnosed with COVID-19 had recovered while the total number of active cases in the country to date is 97.

It said presently, all of the active cases are doing well. The new cases bring the total number of cases diagnosed in the country to date to 5484.

As of July 19, a total of 31, 723 individuals have received the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine and 23, 329 individuals have received the second dose.

“As we continue to be at risk for the introduction of the COVID-19 variants, the public is advised to remain vigilant and adhere to the public health measures. It is important that everyone make it a priority to protect the health and safety of themselves, family, friends, colleagues and others.

“Let us all remember that we are still managing the COVID-19 pandemic and therefore everyone should take the necessary measures to reduce the spread of the COVID-19 virus,” the ministry added.

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World View: US Life Expectancy Down, Drug War has Imprisoned Millions of Blacks, Weinstein to Face More Accusers, More

Jul 21, 2021

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NEW YORK (AP) — U.S. life expectancy fell by a year and a half in 2020, the largest one-year decline since World War II, public health officials said Wednesday. The decrease for both Black Americans and Hispanic Americans was even worse: three years….Read More

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